shrimp

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Well, I’m proud to say that out of our past two CSA shares, we were able to eat about 95% of the vegetables with the other 5% unfortunately ending up in the compost heap that I am semi-obsessed with. The soil in our back yard turns out to be super fertile, but I am tending that compost for when we turn over the garden beds in the fall. My plan is to double our own garden next year. Um. . . and I may have convinced the husband that we need a glass house so I can extend my growing season. I want all the fresh and local veggies and fruits!

 

CSA Share

The past two weeks of our CSA have been chock full of lettuces again, with the addition of lots of kale, zucchini, dill, cucumbers, more garlic scapes, and some onions. Oh, and parsley. What do you do with a TON of parsley? I like to chew on it on its own, but I don’t really have many recipes for fresh parsley!

We’ve been working to meal plan so that we include all of the beautiful fresh veggies we are receiving. One of the best ways to use up different types of lettuce, is grilling it up and serving with a delicious dressing. I had my first grilled lettuce at Diavola in Geyserville, California on a heavenly wine country trip, and I was sold at first bite. Once lightly grilled, an entire head of lettuce is appealing to me. We have been serving with a good bottled Caesar dressing. Grilled lettuce is so simple but really changes up the flavors and textures and makes salad a little more exciting.

grilled lettuce

Shrimp and dill are perfect together, so one Friday night we made shrimp in a frothy dill butter sauce. My favorite shrimp dish is my shrimp with dill and sambuca, but we were missing some of the ingredients. This did the trick. With a salad, of course. Winking smile

shrimp and dill butter

Speaking of salads, we’ve been eating a LOT of them. Kale and all sorts of greens come together for a filling bowl, topped with chopped garlic scapes and a homemade buttermilk dill dressing.

dill buttermilk dressing

For this dressing, I simply mixed buttermilk, a bit of sour cream, salt, pepper, and dill and poured over shredded kale and lettuce. It was fresh, tangy, and super easy.

 

dill buttermilk dressing

While eating our entire CSA still remains a challenge, we are loving it, especially the email we get every Tuesday letting us know what’s growing that week. I love how each delivery depends on what the weather is doing, though I am sure this makes farming stressful!

What summer produce recipes are you loving lately?

Tags: CSA, dill, farm to table, Food, grilled lettuce, recipes, salads, shrimp, vegetables

Charleston, South Carolina, in just a few short days during a work trip years ago, became one of those places I want to visit again and again. I just haven’t made it back quite yet. It’s beautiful, it was in the 70’s in January, there’s a waterfront, lots of great shopping, and of course amazing food, like the dinner we had at High Cotton. Ever since, I have craved shrimp and grits, fried oysters, and fried green tomatoes.

To whip up an easy, summery meal, I decided the other night to make my own low country boil.

Old Bay

A low country boil could not be easier, and it made for a really full flavored meal that we ate picnic-style on the kitchen floor. I love the ease of summer!

Here’s what I included in my low country boil:

Lots of Old Bay!

1/4 stick of butter

1/2 large white onion, chopped

2  jalapeños, chopped

1 package turkey kielbasa

3 ears corn, broken in half

20 medium shrimp

enough water to cover the corn

onions and jalapenos

image

Putting the boil together is as easy as heating the butter in a large pot, adding the onion and jalapeño and letting them cook for a couple of minutes. I then poured in the water and Old Bay and added the corn and kielbasa and waited for it to come to a boil. The shrimp went in very last, and once they were pink, the boil was done. I don’t like my corn too cooked (in fact I nibble it raw sometimes!), so if you are making this, you may want to add a little bit of time after everything starts boiling.

shrimp boil

Yum!

shrimp boil

Because I was having a major craving for clams, I also made a bunch of New England steamers and butter as a side. This meal was perfection!

steamer clams

I still do have that lobster craving though. . .

Happy happy happy birthday to my husband, my favorite person in the world!

Tags: corn, dinner, Food, recipe, sausage, shrimp

Ahhhh island time. It’s definitely something this high-strung girl can get used to. . . after a day or so! Our trip to Sanibel Island was schedule-free with just the way felt to guide us. One day we spent hours and hours on the beach, forgetting it was dinner time until we wandered back to the condo after 7:00. We ate some great meals out in Sanibel and Captiva, and as always, I found one I wanted to bring home with me.

Our first day back was busy; my husband had a work crisis, and I had to wrap up a report for a client. To keep us just a little bit on island time, I recreated a dish we had at Doc Ford’s Rum Bar & Grille, putting a healthier twist on it to help us ease back into real life.

Doc Ford’s Yucatan shrimp appetizer combines steamed shrimp with butter, lime juice, cilantro, and chili peppers for a spicy, tangy treat that is good to the very last drop of sauce.

Yucatan Shrimp

I know that the Doc Ford’s version contained a LOT of butter (which is why it was better than my version), so when I went to make the dish, I used about 1/4 stick of butter and 1/4 cup of Chile olive oil from the Olives reopening event.

ingredients

To get started, I boiled about 20 medium shrimp, knowing we would have some leftover for my husband’s lunch the next day. While the shrimp were boiling, I chopped the chili peppers and cilantro and juiced the lime. I quickly melted the butter with the chilis. When the shrimp were done, I tossed them in, shells and all, and mixed in the cilantro and lime juice.

I prepared simple beds of arugula and grape and sungold tomatoes and topped the salads with the shrimp.

arugula and tomatoes

Yucatan shrimp

Dinner took less than 20 minutes to whip up; the peel and eat aspect of the shrimp really makes it speedy. If I was making this as a pasta dish or something else where I wanted the shrimp to be coated in the sauce, I would definitely peel them. The flavors were very similar to the shrimp we had at Doc Ford’s, and it made for a healthy, filling dinner and lunch.

Tags: Food, healthy, recipe, salad, shrimp

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