I think back on the dishes I normally like to make with my all-time favorite Fall ingredient, the glorious pumpkin. On this blog, I’ve done pumpkin bread, and pumpkin spice lattes. I’ve made pumpkin cupcakes, pumpkin cookies, pumpkin muffins, pumpkin pie, etc. I even taste and review pumpkin beers on an almost yearly basis. I think we all know how I feel about pumpkin. If you notice, I am only using pumpkin in sweet dishes. I am not the type of person to mix my sweet and savory foods together. I know this makes me weird. I will only eat sweet potatoes if they are heavily spiced with spices like red pepper flakes, fennel, or cumin. Even my butternut squash soup has garlic and herbs in it, and tangy yogurt, rather than the typical nutmeg and sweet cream. Having said this, I would never have thought to use pumpkin in any of my savory dishes, but last year I was enticed into trying out a turkey chili with pumpkin. I can’t really tell you why, I think I was just looking for something new to try out in the warm months, and it sounded like a good idea. I was not sorry. Not only is the chili delicious, it’s quick and easy to make, and it’s also pretty healthy. I actually got this recipe from my boss. I am not really sure where she got it, so I can’t actually give credit where credit is due, but thank you to whomever originally posted this on the interwebs for us to find and make our own. (more…)

I love to cook but I really, really, hate the cleanup. I don’t like to wash dishes (who does), and I don’t like turning around and realizing that I’ve used most of the pots/pans/bowls/cutting boards in my cabinet preparing one meal. Therefore most of the time I like to cook simple food that can be prepared easily and with little fuss, and done in one pot, thank you. I stumbled across this dish in an issue of Cuisine at Home (one of my very favorite food magazines). It’s in their CuisineLite issue which was also very appealing. It’s a pork tenderloin dish made with fennel, red onion, and potatoes, with one of my very favorite flavor combinations-rosemary, garlic and lemon. Yummm.
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It’s still winter and winter makes me crave soup. Not only is it comforting to dive into a steaming bowl of soup but I find it to be particularly satisfying as well. Chicken soup is the ultimate comfort soup for me but unfortunately I am still smarting from my viewing of Food, Inc and I refuse to buy, cook, or eat chicken of any kind. Having limited myself in this way I decided to concentrate on hearty non-meat sources. Black beans and lentils made the most sense to me, not just because they are great sources of protein but also because I actually love black bean soup and lentil soup. It certainly helps that both soups are extremely healthy as well and what girl isn’t watching her waist-line this early in the New Year? So I decided to spend an entire Saturday making two different kinds of black bean soup and do a comparison (I also made Alton Brown’s lentil soup but that’s another post). One was a recipe from Bon Appetit (found via Smitten Kitchen) and another is a Bobby Flay recipe from his Bobby Flay’s Mesa Grill Cookbook: Explosive Flavors from the Southwestern Kitchen. Both were conveniently accompanied by Bobby Flay’s cumin crema which made comparing them even easier. The Bon Appetit recipe was made in a slow cooker while Bobby’s was made in a pot but I don’t think that changed the outcome in any way and I feel you could interchange the cooking vessels and the soups would still be the same. The slow cooker is a nice option because you don’t need to keep an eye on it, while the pot is nice because the soup is done in a shorter period of time.
Anyway, enough about that, let’s get to the good stuff-the flavor! (more…)

It’s winter and there is nothing that warms my chilly bones like a steaming bowl of stew. It’s so comforting, especially when it’s accompanied by a perfectly crusty piece of bread. I’ve made various stews in the past but I was really looking for a hearty beer stew this time around. I was inspired by a recipe I found on Simply Recipes and used it as a base for this one. The end result was a rich and hearty stew with depth of flavor from the beer and tomato paste, and a nice tang from the mustard. It’s gotten rave reviews from both friends and the boyfriend.
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