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Abby Park

After our Blue Hills Brewery adventure last Saturday, we decided to make a South Shore day of it with dinner at Milton’s Abby Park. Like many suburban restaurants, Abby Park graced us with the convenience of a parking lot, a little luxury that is always a nice surprise.

Even though we were there for a fairly early dinner at 5:30, the restaurant was starting to fill up, and while we didn’t have a reservation, we were seated but told that our table did have a reservation for 7:30. We both knew we were in the mood for appetizers and drinks and figured we had plenty of time.

Abby Park

The inside of Abby Park is really nice, dimly lit with lots of dark wood, a large square bar that was completely full of people, and tables sprinkled throughout the upstairs and in a smaller room downstairs. We had a cozy table for two, and while it felt a little close to the other two top next to us, being a little crowded on a Saturday night is to be expected. Although, when they people sat down next to us, they introduced themselves and said they were having dinner with us. Ha. Ha.

Prosecco

Ever the fan of bubbly, I started with a glass of Prosecco while the husband had a Blue Hills IPA in the spirit of our Blue Hills Adventure.

As predicted, we decide to share two salads and two appetizers for our meal. I started with the grilled Caesar salad. Ever since my first grilled Caesar salad at Diavola in Geyserville, CA, I have ordered this dish whenever I see it on the menu. I am huge when it comes to temperature and texture contrasts, and the mix of cold and hot, crunchy, and soft bits of lettuce are pure salad love for me. The creamy dressing was garlicky and smooth, dotted with briny bits of white anchovies (optional), and crunchy, buttery croutons. I wish I could say that I shared this entire head of lettuce with my husband, but he didn’t get more than a bite. It was SO good.

grilled caesar salad

He ordered the roasted beets salad with feta and pistachios. The bite of beet that I had was sweet and cold with a hit of feta and a pistachio which brought up a discussion about why we don’t buy pistachios more often. I decided it is because they are addictive, and we would eat them all in 10 minutes. Winking smile

BLT pizza

For our hot courses, we split the BLT&C Pizza which was phenomenal. It sounds kind of weird, but it brought together cheddar cheese, bacon, fresh juicy tomatoes, lettuce, and a chive mayonnaise. I can not wait to order this pizza again.

We also shared the lobster dip with flatbread which was very good, but not good enough for me to stop eating the pizza, for the most part.

We decided against dessert as the meals we had were really filling, but I will return for the chocolate bread pudding.

The service at Abby Park was really great. The restaurant manager (or owner) was around checking in at tables really frequently, maybe a little too frequently. By the crowds inside the restaurant and those in the small waiting area and bar, you could tell that Abby Park is a local favorite for families, groups of friends, and couples out for a nice date. As you would expect, the prices were reasonable, less than those in the city. Sometimes going out in the burbs is just the laid back experience we are looking for.

If you live in the city, do you often get out to the suburbs for restaurants? If you live in the suburbs/country, do you get into the city often?

Tags: Abby Park, Abby Park review, dinner, Food, lobster dip, Milton, pizza, restaurant, salad

Grand plans I have in this kitchen of mine. Stuffing pepper boats with a wheat berry salad popped into my mind sometime last week, and on our adventure in Market Basket, I picked up all of the necessary ingredients.

Wheat berries were soaked overnight. I feel no need to even cook them; I like them just chewy enough. No, I love them. I am becoming obsessed with wheat berries.

wheat berries

When I started prepping the poblano peppers for roasting, I started to think they were a little small for stuffing, but figured I would just top them with the salad.

poblano peppers

Until they came out of the oven. I should have taken an after photo, because it was quite pathetic. They shrunk and flattened, losing about 1/4 of their already paltry size. There would be no stuffing, so I decided on a simple salad using the planned ingredients.

After chopping and sautéing butternut squash until soft,  I tossed it with the room temperature wheat berries.

butternut squash

I also used my trusty veggie scissors to cut the shrunken peppers.

wheat berry salad

I tossed the salad with goat cheese and added a few scoops to a bed of Olivia’s Organics herb salad blend, my favorite boxed salad ever.

Olivia's Organics herb salad

Wouldn’t that have been a great stuffing for roasted pepper boats? I thought so.

The roasted peppers were intensely flavorful with a nice spice to them, and it worked so well with the goat cheese, sweet squash, and herbaceous salad. I have seen lots of people tweeting about looking for healthy recipes, and I would highly recommend this one. I topped it with a few spoonfuls of jarred salsa verde to add even more of a kick, then devoured two whole plates.

I have seriously been adding wheat berries to everything, oatmeal, yogurt, salads, and soups. They are delightfully nutty and chewy and a great whole grain.

Have you developed any new favorite healthy recipes in the New Year as we all detox from the holidays?

Tags: cooking, Food, healthy eating, healthy recipes, recipe, salad, wheat berries

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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