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Cuban Pork Stew

It may only be Monday, but I’ve got your Sunday dinner right here. Our Autumn officially began this weekend with our boat’s journey to its winter storage space. We got incredibly lucky with a perfect, warm, calm blue sky day for the two hour trip, and we were able to enjoy some bubbly along the way. It was fun, it was perfect, and it was also kind of heartbreaking. Being on the boat makes both of us happier than pretty much anything, and the thought of winter. . .

Well, I can’t even think about it.

So for now, instead of thinking of my dread and doom for the next five months, I will share a recipe inspired by this years’ Sonoma Wine Road Wine & Food Affair Cookbook.

Food and Wine Affair Cook Book

It’s no secret  I love cooking with wine and pairing wine and food, and every page of this book does just that. The second I received my copy, I started thumbing through and marking recipes with slips of paper. On a recent dreary day, I decided to make a Cuban Port Stew, inspired by this recipe submitted by Kachina Vineyards.

recipe - Sonoma Wine Road

Ingredients:

Pork shoulder

red onion, finely chopped

5 cloves garlic, finely chopped

1 cup Amista Zinfandel

1 cup chicken broth

1 cup orange juice

4 teaspoons tomato paste

cumin, salt, pepper, and chili powder to taste

juice of one lime

2 large sweet potatoes, roasted and mashed

as much butter as you like on your mashed sweet potatoes

Amista Zinfandel

chicken broth

tomato paste

orange juice

The large majority of this recipe is in the prep. I first rubbed the pork with the spices and salt and put it aside. Then I softened the onion and garlic in some oil, added the pork shoulder and browned on all sides, pouring the liquids (except the lime juice)and tomato paste in after, stirring, and covering until the pork started to cook fully. At that point, I started to shred it with two forks. Right before serving, I added the lime juice, then plated up the pork stew over buttered, mashed sweet potatoes.

cumin

The potatoes and citrus flavors went so well together, and the pork was really tender. Pork and red wine do go together, and this Amista Zinfandel lent jammy berry flavors to round out the dish.

mashed sweet potato

Sadly, while it was delicious, it was not the prettiest dish. Fall food is definitely not always lovely to look at, but it does the trick with bold, comforting flavors, textures, and temperatures, and makes spending time in the kitchen a treat when you come up with a slow cooked meal.

The Tasting Along the Wine Road cook book was provided to me as a media sample; it typically comes along with registration  for the Wine and Food Affair, which I highly recommend experiencing at some point in life.

Happy Monday!

Tags: Food, pork, recipe, stew, wine

Some weeks just seem to be cursed. For me, last week was that week. I happen to be a lover of Mondays. I know my love for the first day of the week is not that common, but I usually have fun, relaxing weekends and wake up feeling rested and excited for the possibilities the week will bring.

But when you find out on a Monday before 9 am that not just one, but two of the long-term projects you’ve been working on are ending unexpectedly, well, that’s not the kind of possibility I am looking for. Add to that a virus-infected blog (sorry!), another project disappointment, a few promised calls that never came, a bad running week, and a few other things that I can’t really mention, and the week is like being behind a punching bag that keeps being hit.

Cooking is almost always a comfort in times like this, and I felt some positive energy as I thought about mixing in the season’s favorite ingredient, pumpkin, with a few other ingredients to make a vegan “cheese” sauce for pasta.

While in the checkout line at the store, I noticed that my can of pumpkin was severely dented. With just a minute to spare until it was my turn to check out, I sprinted back to the pumpkin aisle to grab another can.

pumpkin mac and cheese ingredients

When I got home I realized it was pre-made pumpkin pie filling instead of plain old pumpkin. With the week I was having, this was last straw kind of stuff. We were eating this pumpkin for dinner if the meal had to consist of pumpkin pie.

Luckily, we have a kitchen full of spices, and I was able to counteract the pumpkin pie flavor, making a creamy, delicious sauce that was full of flavor and nutrition.

The ingredients:

19 ounce can of cannellini beans, drained

30 ounce can of pumpkin (or pumpkin pie mix)

3/4 cup of nutritional yeast, plus as much as you like for topping finished product

1 medium white onion, chopped

4 cloves garlic, chopped

1 teaspoon garlic powder

1 teaspoon chili powder

1 teaspoon salt

2 tablespoons curry powder

shake of red pepper flakes

image

Since I knew I would be blending the sauce for a long time, I roughly chopped the onion and garlic, just so that it could cook and soften all the way through.

pumpkin curry sauce

Once the onion and garlic were smelling great and softening in some olive oil, I layered in the other ingredients for the sauce: white beans, nutritional yeast, chili powder, curry powder, and pumpkin, plus a dash of habanero sauce.

I let the mixture get nice and hot, stirring everything together as it simmered, and then transferred into my trusty Ninja blender. I love this thing!

pumpkin curry sauce  - perfect for pumpkin mac and cheese

I blended for about five minutes until the sauce was nice and creamy and used it as a topping for whole wheat elbow macaroni, adding extra nutritional yeast to make it a little more “cheesy”.

While the week might have been a bad one, and I completely flubbed on the pumpkin purchase, a little bit of creativity and a lot of spice was able to turn dinner around, avoiding a GrubHub order. We’ve certainly been doing enough of those lately!

There’s nothing like a good dinner and a positive attitude to try to turn things around!

Have you had any kitchen “oops” moments that you were able to fix into something fabulous?

Tags: delicious, dinner, Food, healthy, healthy comfort food, pumpkin, recipe, sauce, vegan

Meal planning is definitely one of those things that comes and goes in our house. There are some weeks where I have everything from breakfast to snacks to dinner all mapped out, broken down on a shopping list, and ready to go. I love those weeks; if you know me, you know that a hungry Meghan is not a good thing.

Then there are the weeks I sort of lose inspiration or don’t have time and everything is up in the air. You know, the weeks where you are scrounging around the fridge for ingredients for some semblance of a meal.

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Sometimes, though, the things you have laying around make for one tasty dinner, like crispy, cheesy chicken tenders with a side of roasted broccoli.

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This is a super easy recipe. I grabbed one sleeve of whole wheat crackers and pulsed them into crumbs, adding in garlic powder and black pepper to season.

image

I shredded about a cup of Cabot extra sharp cheddar.

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Sprinkled both on the chicken, in layers. . .

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And popped the chicken in a 400 degree oven until cooked through.

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For a meal with just three ingredients and minimal prep time, this chicken was amazing. It was nicely cheesy and crispy and made for a perfect dinner.

I love when that happens.

Are you good at meal planning, or do you end up scrambling for dinner ideas?

Tags: cheese, chicken, dinner, Food, meals, recipe

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