Contents:
Lentil soup with bison sausage

I’ve been having fun with my new (old) crock pot.
For the lentil soup I threw everything in without browning. If one wants a richer soup saute or brown the meat and veggies a bit. This one came out very well without doing so. I simply cut up and threw all the below ingredients into the pot and turned it on high. I cooked it for the afternoon. If you want to do it overnight the low setting would be fine as well.
The sausages were highly flavored and spiced so the flavor of the soup was greatly influenced by them. Think about what sort of sausage you’re using and adjust the flavors accordingly.
Ingredients
1 lb bison sausage (any sausage of your choice is fine)
2 cups dry lentils
water to fill the pot after all ingredients added
whole bunch of celery sliced
1 large onion diced
3 carrots sliced
5 cloves garlic diced
1 cup red wine
3 bay leaves
1 tbls celery seed
2 tbls balsamic vinegar
2 tbls molasses
Salt and pepper to taste (I used red chili flakes)
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Apples and cranberries cooked in brandy
I’m into natural desserts which are generally fruity in nature, though I’m experimenting with raw unsweetened chocolate lately. Perhaps I’ll have a recipe of such soon.
This dessert came about by accident. I actually bought the cranberries to go in a squash and apple roast inspired by Joanne, but then I needed a less intensive thing to do and I really wanted dessert, so this is what happened to the cranberries instead. Well some of them, I still have some left, so perhaps the roasted squash will still come to be.
I cut 3 apples up in bite size pieces, leaving the skin on. I like skin, if you don’t go ahead and peel them.
Then I threw in a few handfuls of cranberries. I didn’t measure. Think about how tart you want your dessert, or alternately how much sugar you want to add or not. I didn’t want to add much sugar and I like things tart so I put what I figured would work out given my desire for sweetness.
I had a juicing orange hanging around from the last batch of pumpkin soup I made so I peeled and cut that up also in bite size pieces.
I tossed this all up in a pot and poured 1/2 a cup of brandy over the top, followed by 1/2 tsp of cinnamon and 1/2 tsp of nutmeg.

Brought it to a boil, then turned it down to a simmer, covered it and let it cook until all the fruit was soft.
I drizzled just a small bit of honey on mine (about a teaspoon) and ate it with chopped walnuts on top. My husband didn’t add sugar but ate his with ice cream. The following day I topped in with plain yogurt after drizzling a bit of honey on it.
It had a delightfully strong brandy flavor even though it was all cooked out.

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Potatoes au gratin
We’ve been getting CSA boxes so some of the stuff we get I don’t normally buy. Potatoes oddly enough is one of those items. I do make roasted potatoes for my husband from time to time–I love them too, but don’t eat much of them as they do not agree with my hypoglycemia. In any case, I do like them and when I saw Tina’s gratin I decided to do one with the potatoes we got.
I pretty much did my own thing as far as the recipe goes. Essentially I just made a very cheesy bechamel sauce that I poured over layers of potatoes and onions.
I actually cooked it another 20 minutes after I took this photo and it came out much more brown and lovely in the end.
Ingredients:
- 4 different sized and shaped potatoes sliced in thin rounds (uniformity is not common in CSA boxes)
- 1 very large red onion cut in thin half circles
- 1/4 cup flour of your choice
- 2 cups whole milk
- 2 tbls butter
- 2 cups shredded cheese of your liking (I used some sort of inexpensive organic cheddar but gruyere or something a little more interesting would be great!)
- salt and pepper to taste
- garlic powder
I oiled the bottom of an 8 x 8 baking pan and then put a layer of potatoes, followed by a layer of onions and repeated with a final layer of potatoes on top.
To make the bechamel I pretty much cheated. A proper bechamel starts with a roux and then you slowly add milk and then slowly heat that until it boils and thickens. I can’t stand very long so I heated the milk and the cheese until close to boiling on a relatively high flame and then I added a 1/4 cup of flour that had part of the total milk volume added into it to make a cold flour and milk mixture which I drizzled into the hot milk and cheese. Instant bechamel! The cheaters way. I’m learning to do a lot of things cutting corners and in general I’m not too disappointed. There is much I will gladly go back to doing the long way when I can, but frankly this cheaters bechamel was fine with me.
I poured the cheesy bechamel over the top and put it into a 350 degree oven. I’m not sure how long I cooked it. When I took the above photo it actually was not done and I ended up cooking it until it was a much more brown.
It was good. I’ve never made anything like this and I’m not sure if it compares to anything that is truly a gratin. What say you?
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White cannellini bean hummus with cilantro
Looks like guacamole, but it’s not!

- 2 cups white beans (cooked in the crock pot over night on low after soaking for about 4 hours — in the morning I turned it on high for about 1 1/2 as the beans weren’t cooked! that surprised me)
- 1/2 cup olive oil (more if needed)
- 5 cloves of garlic (more or less to taste)
I pureed the olive oil and cilantro in a food processor with the garlic first then added the rest of the ingredients. Blended until smooth.
I served this on grilled eggplant slices the day I made it. After that I ate it on rice cakes, and also used it in place of salad dressing. It can be a sandwich spread, or a veggie dip. I imagine it can be frozen as well, though I’ve not tried it yet.
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Creamy chicken mushroom soup

Ingredients:
- 64 oz stock of your choice
- 6 cloves of garlic minced
- Fresh ground black pepper to taste
Boiled chicken in stock for 2 hours with the bay leaves and the celery seed. I usually skin the chicken first to avoid having to take the fat off of the soup in some other way.
In separate pan I sauteed the garlic, onions, celery, and mushrooms until soft. Then I added the wine and brought it to a boil and turned it off while I waited for the chicken.
Once the chicken is done I remove the chicken from the broth and let cool. I take out the bay leaves from the stock.
I crumbled the goat cheese and melted it in the broth at this point.
Once cool I take all the meat off the chicken and cut it up in very small pieces. At this point all is thrown together–the chicken, broth with goat cheese and the sauteed veggies with the wine. Heat all together to blend flavors, then serve.
If you want a creamier soup you can add a 1/4 cup flour after first adding water very slowly until you have a liquid. Drizzle in the flour with water while stirring a boiling soup. I did not add the flour and liked it just as it was.
One can also add rice which I intend to do tomorrow for the second round. I like steaming the rice separately.
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Multi-colored chard with dried cranberries and pinenuts
This chard is from our winter CSA box. It’s so nice to continue getting stuff off the farm locally even though our garden is done.

This is a really nice and easy veggie dish. I simply steamed the chard and added olive oil, pine nuts and dried cranberries. It’s pretty and delicious.
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Pureed vegetarian borscht
Photo a little blurry, but what a nice color:

Borscht is a soup people tend to either go hot or cold on. I’m hot for it. Love it. I thought of that as one can eat it hot or cold too! (ugh, bad play on words, perhaps?) It can also be made with meat or just veggies. There are endless variations. I simply used what I had around as is my wont to do.
Ingredients:
- 6 beets (I used three orange and three red beets)
- 3 tbls dill (fresh would be better, I used dry)
- 1/2 cup very strong red wine vinegar (I get this really rocking stuff from a winery in California’s Napa Valley. My step father is the source. I have never liked the weak crap you can get in the grocery store and also grew up with fine vinegar. This stuff is thick and dark and you can’t see through it–it’s a whole other realm of wonderful–if you have ordinary vinegar you might want to use more as you like)

I cut up everything in relatively large chunks as I am not well enough to do lots of time consuming stuff, including endless chopping. (I’m a hard-core foodie so I can’t give it up, but I do have to take a lot of short cuts) If you can cut some of the veggies before hand and saute them, that’s better. Then whether you puree it at the end is a matter of taste.
I just did big chunks and threw all the ingredients in a pot and let it cook for about an hour and a half. I then let it cool a bit and pureed it in a blender.
Top with thick delicious greek yogurt.
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Pulled-chicken “barbecue” — crock pot cooking

juicy pulled chicken
Joanne from Eats Well With Others commented on my pork stew the other day and mentioned doing pulled pork in a crock pot. I immediately thought I would be doing that soon. I ended up with three large chicken quarters in my fridge and figured I’d do pulled chicken instead. I prefer pulled pork, but wanted to do something different with the chicken and I have my new toy, the crock pot.
So Joanne did recipes that included more sweetness. I live in the land of pulled pork (the south) and here they make both sweet and vinegary versions. I like the vinegary versions better. I’ve never been one to like sweet barbecue sauce.
Occasionally I make my own bbq sauce for chicken and I use a vinegar based hot sauce, tamari and garlic. Simple and yummy. I did a variation on that theme for this chicken.
- 3 oz Flamin’ hot pepper sauce (little more than 1/2 the bottle)
- 1/4 cup ketchup (I would leave this out next time–I never use ketchup, it’s in the house for my husband, I used this for him thinking if would be more bbq-ey, and it was but I like the sharper flavors of it without the ketchup. This ketchup happens to be organic but it’s still got sugar in it though it’s cane sugar rather than high fructose corn syrup)
- 3 tbls apple cider vinegar
- 12 cloves of garlic (whole)
- 1/2 onion sliced in half circles
I didn’t feel well at all last night so I made this by literally tossing all the above ingredients in the bottom of the crock pot and then topping it with the chicken which I stirred once. It took about 3 minutes. I turned the crock pot on low and went to bed. I let it cook ten hours. There was a lot of juice and perhaps there is not supposed to be, but it’s tasty and went well over rice which is how we ate it.

This is the hot sauce I used which is by no means a requirement. Any vinegar based hot sauce will do. This is very spicey.
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Modified Moussaka — Eggplant and lamb dish
So as my cooking blog world grows I get inspired by more and more people. A week or two ago Auntie V made this eggplant and lamb casserole. Eggplant and lamb are so delicious together so I was immediately drawn to her recipe when I saw her post it on twitter. I knew eggplant and lamb was in my future. I ended up thinking I’d rather make some facsimile of Moussaka which I’ve never made and probably only eaten once or twice. It’s a very delicious Greek dish. I bounced around and looked at multiple Moussaka recipes. Also, since I read a wonderful Greek blogger who makes wonderful Greek food, I visited Peter’s site and found this recipe.
Frankly given Peter is Greek, I’m a bit terrified to admit this is the route I took as I did indeed take liberties. This cannot be considered a true Moussaka. I’m a bit of an Italian food snob as I’m a first generation Italian and so I know that what I’ve done here (especially with the cottage cheese!!) is probably mildly sacrilegious in the eyes of a Greek person. So let’s just call this a Moussaka inspired food.
In any case, I cook with what I have in my kitchen often determining what is created more than a recipe…so here is my creation. It turned out quite nice.
Ingredients:
- 1 lb ground lamb (or ground beef)
- 16 oz canned diced tomatoes
- 4 tablespoons pesto (I had some frozen, you can just use basil of whatever kind you like)
Slice eggplants in rounds, brush them with olive oil, lightly salt them and then put them on the grill. I used a small foreman grill and it took three cycles. I’ve been grilling eggplant instead of frying it for eggplant parmigiana for a long time now and so I did the same here. I also sometimes stick a big pan of eggplant in the oven under the broiler. I never prepare the eggplant with salt ahead of time and don’t know how much of a difference it makes. Peeling the eggplant would certainly make cutting up the dish easier, but I didn’t do that either.
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