Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts

Friday, January 20, 2012

Dinosaur Eggs...A Paleo Kidventure

So from previous posts you know that I have been working on going paleo. As I have said before do what works for you in your weight loss journey, but paleo is really working for me not to mention Mr. Minus-the-46 losing 9 pounds just from eating paleo dinners and the occasional paleo leftovers for lunch. I have also decided to transition our entire family to a paleo diet. I am thriving, the mister is doing well (ahem...yes I am bitter haha) and my kids also seem to do better when I feed them a paleo meal.

First kidventure in paleo...Dinosaur Eggs. Rawr!!!

We got this idea from Sprout online after the kids told me about seeing them made on tv. Essentially it is a scotch egg without the batter and frying. You can use any ground meat you choose and seasonings you like for this recipe we used sausage from our butcher. I say from butcher because this stuff is relatively lean, I would compare it to pastured pork. So here goes...

6 hardboiled eggs, peeled
1.5 lbs pork sausage (or ground meat of your choosing)
Almond flour or starch.




Preheat oven to 375 degrees. 



Next divide the sausage evenly and roll into balls. (note there are 7 eggs & 7 balls. Caveson decided he was hungry and ate an egg...so then there were 6 thus the recipe for 6, plus 1.5 lbs of sausage is perfect for 6)


Let caveson or cavedaughter roll eggs in flour. We used potato starch, it isn't great so I recommend almond flour for sure. While little cave person is coating eggs, flatten a ball like a very thin hamburger patty. 


Place egg in the middle of patty and wrap around egg. Just kind of work it pinching the opening closed. When you are done kind of knead it so that it is good and distributed and sealed shut. 

like this....

Next place on a baking sheet evenly spaced


Bake for approx 25-30 min turning about halfway through. Some may pop open, I just tell the kids the dinosaur is hatching haha. 


Serve alongside caveman spears and flat rocks (polenta). We drizzled home made coleman's style mustard on the caveadults because it is delish! 

You could use premade Colemans but we didn't because it has gluten in it. You could also use regular grain flour but we didn't for the same reason. Polenta isn't really paleo favored but it is gluten free, I was pressed for time & the kids like it. Typically I would have two vegetable sides & planned on making nests out of shredded sweet potatoes (like a thick latke) but didn't have time. Interestingly enough my kids ate more caveman spears than anything. Caveson ate the sausage off of his egg because little stinker already ate a whole egg. Cavedaughter didn't eat anything but caveman spears...I am not complaining lol. 

Hope you give these a try and enjoy. 

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Salad Soup

There is a reason people who reside in California are endlessly thin, they eat salad all year around. It is like Brenda said in 90210 after moving to Beverly Hills "In Minnesota we just throw on a big sweater during the winter" at which Kelly answered "not in Beverly Hills here it is always shorts weather". It is proven that eating more fresh veges as well as filling your plate at least half with veges will result in weight loss. Do you know anyone who eats salads all of the time who are over weight? Okay well that is possible but not with the right kind of salad.

Me, I love salads...in the summer. I can tolerate them in the spring and even a warm fall but when the mercury drops...I want soup. Hot tasty bone warming soup. I just can't eat a salad when it is cold out, even when I know it is good for me and my weight loss goals. Insert salad soup...my winter salad.

Salad soup came to me years ago before I had kids when I was regularly active and coincidentally 30 lbs lighter. I spent my winter Sundays making a huge pot of it for the coming week, I ate a ton of it. My mom introduced me to a weight watchers "free" soup or would be now considered zero points. Filled with veges and reminiscent of the cabbage soup diet's only meal it was tasty. I must have called that woman 20 times asking for that recipe and no matter how many times I wrote it down I lost it so one day rather than call her again for it I just improvised. The result is a fat free, veggie filled soup that replaces my salads in the winter.

Why is it called salad soup? Well first I like catchy fun names, second it replaces my salads and lastly it is as versatile and changeable as a salad. It is a basic soup that starts with cabbage, tomatoes, onions & broth. Then from there you add whatever low starch veggies you like. I almost always start with cabbage, tomatoes, onions, zucchini, green beans and kale. I have also added carrots, turnips, cauliflower and broccoli. One time I added green peppers but they were awful and I could barely eat the soup. I love green peppers but the cooking time brought out the bitterness of them. blecht.

The cool thing is after you chop everything and throw it in a pot, it does the rest of the work, you could even put it in a crock pot. After the soup is ready you can change it up just like you would a salad, it never gets old. I eat it as basic as with a little lemon pepper to as elaborate as adding white beans and chicken. It can be a hunger beating snack or a full meal. It is a total chameleon to your taste and desire for the day. Beat salad boredom anyone...

I don't actually have a recipe for this but I am going to do my best. Really don't be afraid of it, it is completely adaptable and hard to mess up.

Salad Soup

One head of cabbage, chopped or shredded ( I have been using Trader Joe's shredded bagged cabbage)
1 28oz can tomatoes
1 large or 2 small zucchini, bite size pieces
1 med onion, chopped
water or broth
soup base (if using water)
salt & pepper

other add ins - carrots, green beans, turnips, kale, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts. Any non starch vegetable.



Place all chopped vegetables in a large stock pot, add water (or broth) to just covered. add some salt and pepper (you can add more to taste later) and a good spoon of soup base. I used Penzy's chicken soup base in this one, but beef or vegetable will work. Give it a stir.


Now bring to a boil and then reduce to a simmer, cover and let cook. I let it cook close to an hour, when I feel like the veggies are all done but not mushy and I can smell the flavors melded together. 


Now place in a pretty bowl and enjoy. This is when you can enjoy plain (as above) or add in whatever you like. Sometimes I add a cubed cheese stick (I find shredded cheese too stringy haha) or white beans for protein but you can really add anything. Below is a list of some suggested add ins. 

Beans - white and garbonzo are best but red kidney are good as well. 
Cheese (keep it low fat and small amounts)
shredded chicken
tuna
salmon
pine nuts
hot sauce
lemon pepper
chopped hard boiled egg whites
ff Greek yogurt
various seasonings, I add these to each bowl so I can mix it up. I buy a lot of Penzy's spices and their blends some of my favorite are northwoods, lemon pepper, old world and turkish seasoning. They all change the flavor and make it seem like a different soup each time. 

The soup is filling by itself but I find that for a sustaining meal I need a hunk of protein. I hope you give this recipe a try! Enjoy!

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