Lemony Dill Marinaded Tomatoes and Cucumbers

grilled corn and marinade

I picked most of my corn last weekend. Since I don’t spray pesticides, I usually have a small worm chewing on the tip of the corn. That earworm is actually the larva hatched from an egg the adult moth lays in the silk of the corn. When the egg hatches, the young larva feeds on the silk and ultimately the corn.

While the worm may look gross, it’s not a big deal to cut off the damaged part of the corn and process as usual. In fact, I feel better about corn from my garden or purchased at the farmers’ markets because I know it’s healthier and I expect the worm. When buying pesticide-free corn, try to look under the silk and get the ones with less earworm damage.

I grilled some of the corn and cut the kernels from the cob. I’ve printed that recipe before, so go to my website and search on the word “corn” for grilling tips. I also grilled turkey chorizo links to go with the corn. The buttery, smoky sweetness of the grilled corn was amazing with the spicy taste of chorizo.

Roma tomatoes and cucumbers are doing well in the garden, so I collected some of those and found a handful of dill that the grasshoppers hadn’t demolished… yet. I made a citrus-dill marinade for tomatoes, cucumbers and red onions to go with the corn and chorizo.

Citrus and Dill Marinade
½ cup olive oil
¼ cup white balsamic vinegar
1 lemon, zested and juiced
2 cloves garlic, finely minced
1 Tbsp. dill, chopped
2 tsp. salt
½ tsp. cracked black pepper

Combine all ingredients in a pint-sized jar and give it a good shake. The marinade is then ready to be poured over tomatoes, cucumbers and red onion slices. Let the vegetables with marinade sit in the fridge for about 30 minutes before serving.

I topped mixed greens with the marinated vegetables and used the juice as the salad dressing. Adding a few crumbles of feta cheese on top of the salad and skipping the chorizo makes this meal vegetarian. Refrigerate leftover marinade and use it as salad dressing later in the week.

Stuffed Chicken Saltimbocca

Chicken Saltimbocca

Saltimbocca in Italian means “jumps in the mouth.” I’m not sure if that’s because the flavors are so delightful when eating the dish or if it tastes so good that one can’t resist another bite. It is usually made with veal but I’ve always made it with chicken. The dish is common in southern Switzerland, Italy, Spain and Greece.

Each country has its own version and flavor preferences, so there are many variations. I’ve modified my recipe and the following version is low-cal and low-fat.

Stuffed Chicken Saltimbocca
4 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves
6 oz. reduced-fat feta cheese
1 Tbsp. fat free Half & Half
6-8 sage leaves, chopped
1 tsp. garlic salt
1⁄2 tsp. cracked black pepper
1 tsp. olive oil

Butterfly-cut the chicken breast halves by slicing widthwise almost to the other edge. Lay a large piece of plastic wrap on the cutting board. Open each breast, keeping the edge intact, and spread across the plastic wrap. Place another piece of wrap on top of the chicken. Gently pound the chicken with the flat side of a meat mallet, using a down-and-away motion until it is about 1⁄4 inch thick. The plastic wrap contains the raw chicken, reducing contamination and making clean-up easier.

Crumble the feta cheese into a bowl and mix in the Half & Half, sage, garlic salt and pepper. Place a spoonful of the mixture on each flattened chicken breast. Roll up and place on a baking pan. Brush olive oil on each roll and season with a little salt and pepper. Cook in a 400-degree oven for 25 minutes.

Clean the cutting board, utensils and work surface with hot soapy water. Always wash your hands after handling raw chicken and never reuse the cutting board without thoroughly cleaning it first. In fact, it is best to have separate cutting boards when making this dish – one for the raw chicken prep and one for processing the herbs and vegetables.

Salad with Seasoned Bread Crumb Topping
1 Tbsp. butter
1 cup panko bread crumbs
1 tsp. fresh thyme, chopped
1 tsp. garlic salt
3 tomatoes, sliced
1 head romaine lettuce

In a small frying pan, melt butter and add bread crumbs, thyme and garlic salt. Cook on low heat, stirring occasionally, until the bread crumbs are lightly toasted. Wash, drain and tear the lettuce into bite-sized pieces. Serve with tomato slices, a splash of lemon juice (or your preferred dressing) and top with the toasted seasoned bread crumbs.

The stuffed chicken saltimbocca and side salad serves 4, and each serving has about 368 calories and 15 grams of fat. For a full fat version, consider using grated provolone cheese instead of feta and wrapping each breast with thinly sliced bacon or prosciutto before baking.

Beef and Vegetable Stir Fry

Beef Veg stir fry

Keeping up with weeds in the gardens and flower beds is a never-ending job. When I think I’m getting caught up in one area, I look around and realize I’ve fallen behind somewhere else. My hands and nails are stained from pulling weeds and my arms and legs are itchy with bug bites and scratches. Yet when I look back at where I’ve been and the garden looks so neat, I’m happy and feel a sense of accomplishment.

I pulled up the remaining onions and English peas. I also cleared out the lettuce beds that were full of weeds, grasshoppers and the now-bitter greens to make room for eggplant and peppers. I made a stir fry with the peas and a few of the onions – and of course – squash makes its return in this dish too.

Beef and Vegetable Stir Fry
1 lb. beef arm roast, cubed
4 cups squash, chopped
1 cup onion, chopped
4 cups cauliflower, chopped
1 cup red and green bell peppers, chopped
2 cups English peas, divided
1 cup beef broth or stock
8 cups cooked rice
2 eggs

Marinade:
1⁄2 cup soy sauce
1⁄4 cup teriyaki sauce
2 Tbsp. brown sugar
2 Tbsp. rice wine vinegar
2 Tbsp. sesame oil
6 tsp. garlic, minced
1/3 cup onion, minced

Prepare the marinade and combine with the cubed beef in a sealable bag. Place in a bowl and marinate in the refrigerator for at least 8 hours. Flip the bag over a few times to make sure the marinade is coating the meat.

When ready to cook dinner, drain the meat and reserve the marinade. In a small pot, bring the reserved marinade and 1 cup beef broth to a boil and continue to cook until it is reduced by half. Prepare rice and add half the fresh English peas and the eggs to the rice after removing from heat. Stir well and place the lid on top. The eggs will cook and the peas will heat by dinner time.

In a wok or large pan, cook the beef on high heat until done. Remove with a slotted spoon and cook the vegetables in the pan juices. Do not over-cook. They should still have some crunch. Return the beef, pour the marinade sauce over all and stir.

Serve the beef and vegetable mixture over rice. The recipe makes 8-10 servings. Each serving contains about 750 calories and 12 grams of fat. After dinner, the leftovers can be packaged in containers to be taken for lunches during the week.

More squash – Sweet & Spicy Pickled Squash

Zucchini

I didn’t sell at the farmers’ market last weekend because my 5-year-old nieces came to visit. We visited the garden daily and picked whatever was ready. We shelled the last of the English peas and we made butter from cream we purchased locally.

For dinner we had peas and squash with the homemade butter. There’s still a lot of squash so I’ll pickle some. Carrots and cauliflower may also be added to this recipe and it is great served with fish.

Sweet and Spicy Pickled Squash
3 lbs. squash (yellow and zucchini), sliced
2 cups onions, sliced
Pickling salt, for sprinkling (about 1⁄2 cup)
6 cups water
3 cups white vinegar
1 1⁄2 cup apple cider vinegar
3 cups sugar
2 Tbsp. mustard seeds
1⁄2 tsp. turmeric
4 cloves
1 large head garlic, skinned and roughly chopped
1 cup hot peppers (I use jalapenos that have turned red), sliced

Layer squash and onion in a large glass bowl, sprinkling the layers with salt and pour the water over all. Let soak for 2 hours. Drain the salt liquid from the vegetables and rinse well. Spread the vegetables out on clean towels and let dry while preparing pickling liquid.

Combine vinegars, sugar, mustard seeds, cloves, garlic and peppers in a pan and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and add vegetables. Bring to a simmer and then remove from heat.

Fill sterile pint-sized jars with the mixture, making sure the liquid is 1⁄2-inch from the top. Wipe the rim with a clean towel and fit with a hot lid. Screw on the metal ring. Process the jars in a hot-water bath for 15 minutes.

Remove jars and let cool. Test the seals. Store the pickles for a least two weeks before serving. Refrigerate any jars that did not seal well.

We also picked scalloped or patty-pan squash. My favorite way to cook those is to slice them in 1⁄2-inch cross sections and marinate them for a few hours in balsamic vinegar, olive oil, salt, pepper and steak rub. Then place them on a hot grill just long enough to leave grill marks. Serve them on toasted buns with the usual hamburger fixings.

Squash is in season!

Market Squash

Now that the days are warming up, yellow squash is growing very well in my garden. Based on other vendor booths at the farmers’ markets, I’d say it is growing well for them too. Most individuals who planted squash in the home garden find that it produces more than they can consume. That’s good because friends and neighbors usually benefit as well. A friend told me that Texas is the only place she’s had someone break into her vehicle and leave something instead of taking something. They left squash.

Squash is great picked young, chopped and eaten raw in a garden salad. It is certainly good boiled in salted water and then served with a small amount of real butter. I like to lightly toss it with other vegetables in olive oil, salt, pepper and thyme or rosemary and then oven-roast it. Try it on the grill when grilling hamburgers and serve it as a side instead of French fries. Mmmm, now I’m getting hungry for a veggie panini sandwich.

Before I get too carried away with all the ways to use squash, my favorite recipe, one that freezes well too, is squash casserole. The recipe is similar to one served at The Black-eyed Pea, but of course I’ve modified it a little. I’ve reduced the sugar and added freshly chopped thyme. The recipe serves 6, and each serving has 146 calories and 5 grams of fat. Served with a lean meat and side salad dressed with lemon juice, it is a great healthy meal.

Squash Casserole
2 lbs. yellow squash
1 Tbsp. butter, softened
1 cup bread crumbs, divided
1 Tbsp. sugar
1⁄2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. fresh thyme, chopped
1 Tbsp. dehydrated onion
2 ea. eggs
1 pinch pepper

Wash and cut squash into 2” cubes and cook in lightly salted boiling water until done. Drain well, mash and continue to drain for about 10 minutes.

In a bowl, combine all the ingredients except for half of the bread crumbs. Place mixture in a lightly greased 2-quart casserole dish. Top with the remaining bread crumbs.

Bake covered in a 350-degree oven for 20 minutes. Uncover and bake for about 10 minutes more or until the crumbs on top are lightly browned.

Using dehydrated onions is important as they help absorb liquid. If using fresh onions, make sure the squash has drained really well or else the casserole won’t set – I’m sure it will still taste good.

Next week I’ll share a pickled squash recipe. There are just too many recipes for squash to fit them all in this article.

Wheat Pasta with Beefy Tomato Sauce

Wheat pasta

I am a pasta lover. In my 30s, I ran 36 miles a week and practiced karate 3 times a week. I could eat anything I wanted. Now, 20 years later, I don’t run – unless I’m being chased – and I try to remember to practice Yoga. I have to watch what I eat, but I still crave pasta. I get my carb-fix with whole wheat pasta cooked in a beefy tomato sauce.

Whole Wheat Pasta in Beefy Tomato Sauce
1 lb. extra lean ground beef
1 cup baby portabella mushrooms, sliced
1 medium onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
8 cups chicken broth
1 12-oz can tomato paste
2 tsp. dried oregano
1 tsp. dried basil
1 12-oz box wheat spaghetti
1⁄2 cup Parmesan cheese
Salt and pepper to taste
Fresh herbs for garnish

Cook meat and onions in a large pot until the meat is brown and the onions are tender. I added a little salt and pepper during that process. Then add the mushrooms and garlic and cook for about 5 minutes. Stir in broth, tomato paste and dried herbs.

Break the spaghetti noodles into approximately 2-inch pieces. (Most Italians would frown on that step, but it helps incorporate the pasta into the dish. It also makes the meal kid-friendly.)

Add broken pasta to the pot and stir. Bring contents to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for about 20 minutes. Stir occasionally and add a little water if necessary.

I served with mixed garden greens dressed lightly with lemon juice. Then I sprinkled chopped fresh parsley, chives and basil and about 1/8 cup of parmesan over all.

Only one pot needed washing after the making of that meal, so clean-up was quick. The recipe served 8, and each serving had 365 calories and 13 grams of fat.

Sauteed Rapini (also known as broccoli rabe)

Rapini

Local gardens are spilling over with fresh greens this time of year and farmers’ markets are doing good business. I have a booth at the Sunrise Market in Sulphur Springs, selling fresh produce, eggs and homemade bread. Despite the rain last Saturday, we had a good turnout.
Rapini, also known as broccoli rabe, is a leafy green with small spikes of broccoli-like clusters. I sold several bunches of rapini at the market and gathered more for dinner on Sunday.

Sautéed Rapini
1 bunch of broccoli rabe, cleaned and tough stems removed
1 Tbsp. olive oil
2 tsp. garlic, minced
1 pinch red pepper flakes
Salt to taste

Blanch the broccoli rabe in boiling salted water for one minute. Remove and immediately plunge into ice water. Once cooled, drain and let dry.

Bring olive oil to medium-high heat in a sauce pan. Add garlic and red paper flakes. Cook for about a minute and add the broccoli rabe. Toss around in the oil. Turn the heat to low and cover pan with a lid. Cook for 5 more minutes. Taste and season with more salt, if necessary.

Sunday dinner consisted of a huge leafy green salad, with sweet radishes (tender leaves included), young peas, onions, asparagus and rapini, all from my garden. I added store-bought tomatoes and avocado as well as a chopped boiled egg laid by one of my chickens.

The salad was dressed with a concoction I made of equal parts oil and red wine vinegar, and to that I add a small amount of Dijon mustard, fresh chopped herbs, minced garlic, salt and pepper. Refrigerate the dressing in a glass jar and just give it a good shake before using.

Support the local farmers’ markets and eat healthy.

Catfish Fillets with Baked Sweet Potatoes and Greens

Catfish

While I haven’t fished lately, just don’t have the time, I think the key to catching fish is being able to think like a fish. Sometimes you also need to think like the bait. My biggest catch was made in a small pond outside Miller Grove. I remember telling myself to “be the sluggo.” I concentrated on guiding the lure to mimic the movements I imagined that creature would make in the water. It worked!

Cleaning fish doesn’t bother me. That is with the exception of catfish – one of God’s more bizarre-looking creatures. I am more than happy to leave that chore to others. So I was really pleased when a friend brought over two gallon-sized freezer bags of catfish fillets. One went into the freezer and the other was that night’s dinner.

Catfish Fillets with Sweet Potatoes and Fresh Greens
Catfish fillets
1 small onion, sliced
2 Tbsp. dill weed, roughly chopped
1⁄2 cup fat-free yogurt
1⁄2 cup fat-free cottage cheese, puréed
1 Tbsp. chives, finely chopped
Small sweet potatoes, peeled
Garlic cloves, slivered
Salad greens
Fresh baby sweet peas
1 lemon, juiced
Salt and pepper to taste

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Cut across the sweet potatoes without slicing all the way through. Place potatoes on a baking sheet. Insert a sliver of garlic in each cut, lightly mist with olive oil and add salt and pepper. Bake for 40 minutes.

Prepare a pouch with a large piece of foil. Spray olive oil on the bottom and place fillets in a single layer with onion and dill on top. Lightly add salt and pepper and seal the foil pouch. Place in a baking dish and bake with the potatoes for the last 20 minutes.

Mix yogurt and puréed cottage cheese with a little salt, pepper and chives. That can be used like tarter sauce with the fish as well as a dip for the potatoes.

Sweet peas are still producing in my garden. I like to pick them early and we eat them raw in salads. Prepare a simple salad with micro-greens and peas.

Each serving consists of a 4-oz. catfish fillet, a small sweet potato, yogurt-cottage cheese sauce, fresh greens and peas. Garnish with freshly squeezed lemon juice. Each serving is about 259 calories with 6 grams of fat.

Salmon Patties

salmon patties

The vineyard is starting to green-up again after April’s frost damage. Over the weekend we pulled the last of the trellis wires over the two-year-old vines, so everything is ready to flourish. The herb garden is also thriving and Sunday afternoon was spent weeding and cleaning that patch. It was a beautiful weekend and a lovely Mother’s Day.

My boys served hamburgers cooked on the grill and baked baby potatoes for dinner on Sunday. I made it diet-friendly by placing my patty on a thin whole wheat roll with onions, lettuce and mustard. Just a dash of garlic salt seasoned the potatoes. It was a minor diet divergence, but I had been good all week.

One low-fat dinner that came out really well was the salmon patties served with fresh vegetables and a dollop of yogurt sauce. I’m not a big fan of canned meats, but I bought canned salmon. The can was a dollar more than the other brands and I hoped that would imply fewer bones to pick and discard. Unfortunately, that wasn’t the case.

Salmon Patties
16-oz canned salmon, picked for bones
1 small onion, diced
1⁄4 cup bread crumbs
4 egg whites
1 tsp. lemon juice
1 Tbsp. parsley, chopped
1 pinch salt and pepper

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Combine all ingredients. Form 8 patties and place on a pan sprayed with cooking oil. (I placed mine on a Silpat mat and no oil was needed.) Cook for 15 minutes until brown.

I had a bunch of asparagus spears ready with a light spray of olive oil and a dash of garlic salt and placed them in the oven for 10 minutes. I also steamed a head of cauliflower with a sprig of rosemary while the patties and asparagus cooked.

I love tartar sauce with fish, but instead I added about a quarter cup of chopped cucumber and 1 chopped green onion to a cup of fat-free Greek yogurt. I added a dash of salt, a tsp. of honey and 1⁄2 Tbsp. of chopped fresh dill.

With two patties per serving, the dinner feeds four. Each serving had 268 calories and 8 grams of fat.

That dinner didn’t seem like diet-food. Perhaps I’m just getting used to less fat. The next day for lunch I had a cold salmon patty with mustard on wheat bread with lettuce and tomato slices. The patties are great served hot or cold.

Tuna Steak With Greens

Tuna Steak1

Other than onions, I planted my garden after the Easter weekend. I normally plant in mid-April, but the late freeze discouraged me and I decided to wait. That same late freeze damaged my grapevines. I’m just now beginning to see the vineyard start to green up again.

With the first buds gone, I’m expecting the second budding to produce a significant drop in fruit. That means this season, I’ll have more foliage to manage with less grapes to show for it.

Spring is a very busy time on my little farm, so I try to keep dinners easy, quick and healthy. Last weekend I made tuna steaks served with fresh vegetables and salad greens.

Tuna Steaks with Greens
1-1/2 lbs. tuna steaks
2 tsp. lemon zest
1 Tbsp. rosemary, minced
1 cup parsley, finely chopped
3 tsp. garlic, minced
1 Tbsp. olive oil, divided
1 bunch asparagus spears
8 button mushrooms, sliced
1 head romaine lettuce
1 handful mixed salad greens
1 tomato, chopped
1 lemon, juiced
Salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Wash asparagus and trim ends. Clean button mushrooms and slice. Drizzle about 2 tsp. olive oil over all. Season lightly with salt and pepper. Toss to coat. Bake for 10 minutes, flipping and tossing the vegetables halfway through the cook time. Remove and let cool.

Mix together lemon zest, rosemary, parsley, garlic, 1 tsp. salt, 1⁄2 tsp. pepper and 1 tsp. olive oil. Spread mixture on both sides of the tuna steaks and place in an oven-safe baking dish. Cook for 8-12 minutes.

My advice if the tuna steaks are fresh and a pink middle is preferred, bake 4 minutes per half-inch thickness. If the steaks were frozen and thawed, cook 6 minutes per half-inch thickness. My steaks were frozen and about an inch thick. I cooked for 10 minutes. There is no need to flip the steaks halfway through the cooking time.

Toss together torn romaine leaves and mixed greens. Serve by laying a bed of greens on each plate. Place the asparagus spears, mushroom slices and chopped tomato on the plates. Lay 4 ozs. of sliced tuna steaks on top of each. Squeezed lemon juice, the juices from the roasted vegetables and tuna provide the dressing for the greens.

This recipe serves 6. Each serving contains 232 calories and 8 grams of fat. Salmon fillets could be substituted for tuna.