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Green Meatloaf

Happy Valentine’s Day! Do you have any fun plans for the day/evening? Due to my being away and my husband’s gazillion hours of work this weekend, our plans are still up in the air, but I am sure we will think of something!

Last night’s dinner, inspired by recent recipes on Alicia’s and Emily’s websites, looked a little more like something you would serve on St. Patrick’s Day, and with Valentine’s Day on its way out, green is where it is at.

I usually make meatloaf several times over the course of the winter; during the last Presidential primaries, meatloaf became a good luck charm when we ate it on the evening our candidate won several states. Following that, I made meatloaf on the evening of all big primaries.

I returned from visiting my family in NJ craving some comfort food as I was missing them and had a harrowing drive back that included a warning from a state trooper. I was also intensely craving greens, and thus green meatloaf was born.

spinach meatloaf ingredients

The ingredients were few: 1/4 onion, chopped, three cups of spinach chopped, a container of ground turkey, one egg, a drop of ketchup, some ground pepper, and salt.

I started with my favorite kitchen tool, these salad shears from the Foodbuzz Festival swag bag. With these my spinach was chopped into tiny pieces in no time, ready to be quickly sautéed with the onion in a bit of oil.

salad shears

chopped spinach

I cooked the spinach down just a bit, then cooled it while I mixed the ground turkey with the egg, pepper, and salt. I then folded in the spinach.

spinach meatloaf

When everything was well blended, I placed it in a loaf pan to cook at 375 until the meat was cooked through. I pondered using a muffin tin to make mini meatloafs, but I envisioned meatloaf sandwiches and went with the loaf pan instead.

spinach meatloaf

About 20 minutes in to cooking, I drained off some liquid from the meatloaf to make sure it cooked up nice and brown. Then I started on the sauce.

Muir Glen was so incredibly generous last month, and I am still reaping the rewards of attending their dinner at Garden at the Cellar.

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I added a can of the Muir Glen organic tomato sauce to the pan that the spinach was cooked in, then added a pinch of red pepper flakes and some garlic powder.

Muir Glen tomato sauce

When the meatloaf was done, I cut it into slices, topped with tomato sauce, and served with my incredibly easy and delicious mashed potatoes.

spinach meatloaf

Just a bunch of potatoes, boiled until soft, drained and mixed with Kerrygold and skim milk, mashed until creamy.

mashed potatoes

Does it get any more comforting than meatloaf and mashed potatoes?

meatloaf and mashed potatoes

I’ll be tucking this recipe away and making it again in the very near future, maybe as part of our St. Patrick’s Day feast. Speaking of St. Patrick’s Day, my birthday falls on the same day as the Boston parade this year, what should I do?!

Tags: comfort food, dinner, Food, health, healthy healthy recipes, mashed potatoes, meatloaf, Muir Glen, recipe, recipes, spinach, tomato sauce, turkey

Thanksgiving has come and gone, but it left behind one of the best leftovers of all, the remains of the turkey. The word carcass was tossed around a few times, and since it is one of the ugliest words in the English language, I will here forth refer to the carcass simply as the turkey. 

My mother sent the turkey home with me this weekend, and I spent Saturday evening and Sunday morning making a couple of very large batches of stock. It was simple, the turkey, plus about 12 cups of water, a quartered yellow onion, a few stalks of celery, leaves and all, crushed garlic, and cracked black peppercorns. Leave to simmer for hours, and return to some of the most flavorful soup stock you will ever eat.

I started the soup by pouring the stock through a colander to remove any solids, then chilling the stock so that I could skim the fat off of the top.

turkey stock

Some fat still remains, which is a good thing, for flavor, but too much and your soup will be an icky oil slick.

skimming turkey stock

I split up my stock into a few containers, one for the soup and a few more for freezing. A winter cold doesn’t stand a chance against my homemade turkey stock. Winking smile 

white onion

The soup ingredients were fairly simple, a chopped white onion, several cups of kale, chopped linguica (Portuguese sausage), white beans, and Israeli couscous. 

kale

linguica

white beans and couscous

I started by sautéing the onion and linguica in a little bit of olive oil until the onion was soft and the linguica was sizzling.  Then I poured in the stock and Israeli couscous and brought it all to a boil.

kale soup

At the very end, I added the white beans and kale, then shut the heat off and let the kale wilt in the soup. I also added some ground black pepper and crushed red pepper flakes.

kale soup

Delicious. Soooo simple, flavorful, nutritious, warm, cozy, comforting, and complete. I could eat this soup over and over and not get tired of it. The linguica gives it a smoky spice that keeps it from being a bland soup. Because of all of the flavors, I did not even need to add salt. It is just lovely.

Do you ever make homemade stock for soup? What was your favorite use for the turkey day leftovers?

Tags: cooking, Food, homemade soup, kale, linguica, recipe, turkey, turkey stock

Meat-a Balls!

Getting my post-pneumonia self strong again would be so much easier if I was actually interested in eating. The past couple of weeks have not been my finest when it comes to cooking or eating well, and yesterday I mustered up all of my energy to create a hearty meal, at least for my husband to eat well.

Justin’s recent post on “tomato, onion, and butter” sauce got me thinking about making sauce, and since I am home all day for the moment and am in love with my new Le Creuset pot, I decided to make meatballs and sauce.

My sauce consisted of just a few ingredients: 2 teaspoons of tomato paste,1 can crushed tomatoes, 1 can fire roasted diced tomatoes, a small yellow onion, 2 cloves chopped garlic, a few teaspoons of basil-infused olive oil, and a few pats of Kerrygold butter. Mid-way through cooking, I also added a generous pour of Castello di amorosa Il Brigante red wine.

pasta sauce ingredients Castello di amorosa Il Brigante

I started by sautéing the onions in a mix of olive oil and butter.

onions and olive oil

Once the onions had softened, I mixed in one of my favorite ingredients, tomato paste. I love the flavor that it adds to the sauce as well as to chili and soups.

tomato paste

I finally added in the rest of the ingredients and left the sauce to bubble on a very low flame for hours.

tomato sauce

About 2 hours before dinner time, I returned to the kitchen to make the turkey meatballs. I used a container of ground turkey, 1 egg, 1 cup of panko bread crumbs, and generous shakes of both dry basil and red pepper flakes.

image

I used my hands (ewwww) to form them into meatballs and then lightly browned the meatballs on the outside in a pan lightly coated with olive oil. Once they were all browned, I placed them in the sauce, turned the heat up, and really got it bubbling for about 20 minutes before turning the heat back down and simmering until we were ready to eat.

turkey meatballs

I didn’t have the energy to make homemade pasta, so I used a new boxed fettuccine that I picked up at the grocery store, Ronzoni Garden Delight, a pasta that boasts a full serving of vegetables per serving.

image

It was very pretty and tasted just like regular old pasta.

garden pasta

garden pasta

I plated the pasta and topped it with the sauce and meatballs, a mix that became so rich and flavorful during the cooking process. It was a VERY good dinner! So good that I actually felt like eating a whole bowl of pasta and 3 meatballs. This is something that is best for a weekend or vacation day because, while I do make some good, quick pasta sauces, this really benefits from the time spent on the stove.

What do you like to cook most when you have the time?

I can’t believe it that I am leaving for the Foodbuzz Festival tomorrow! If you are going let me know so I can make sure to say hi! Smile

Tags: Food, meatballs, pasta, recipe, sauce, turkey

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