Saturday, January 16, 2016

Ok folks - so I am thinking that maybe this is the best thing I have ever eaten....if you like Indian food, holy cow!  Let it simmer all afternoon for tender tasty chicken with a lovely sauce.  Enjoy!



New Delhi Stewed Chicken
Ingredients


3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
2 boneless skinless chicken breasts
1 cup (1 medium) yellow onion - chopped
4 cloves garlic – minced (or pressed)
1 tbsp fresh grated ginger root
1 cup frozen peas
1 cup cooked garbanzo beans (chickpeas)
4 cups chicken broth
1 small can tomato paste
2 medium sweet potatoes, peeled and chopped
1 tbsp garam masala
2 tsp cumin
1 tsp ground coriander
1/2 tsp cayenne
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
Fresh cilantro, for garnish


Instructions
Boil the chicken breasts until they are cooked through.  Set aside the broth for later.

Heat two tablespoons of olive oil in large saucepan over medium heat. Season chicken breasts with salt and pepper and brown on each side for 4-5 minutes. Set aside until cool.

In the same pan, heat the remaining tablespoon of oil and add the onion, garlic, and ginger. Sauté for 6-8 minutes until soft. Add a tablespoon of the tomato paste and the dry spices. Stir to mix well and cook for 3-4 minutes.



Shred the chicken into large chunks and add it, the chicken broth, and the remaining tomato paste. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer for 30 minutes.  Add the sweet potatoes. 



Simmer for another 35-45 minutes, until the sauce is thick and the potatoes are tender, stirring occasionally. During the last five minutes, stir in the cooked garbanzo beans, and the peas. Season with salt and pepper to taste (I don’t usually put any salt in it).  Garnish with fresh cilantro.  Serve warm over cauliflower rice or basmati rice.


SIMPLIFY TIP:
Chicken and garbanzos can be cooked ahead and frozen.

Cook a large quantity of chicken and shred ahead of time.  Place 3-4 cups into large Ziploc freezer bags and freeze.  Also freeze the broth in 2 cup quantities in freezer containers.


Cook garbanzos and freeze in 1-2 cup quantities.

Sunday, January 10, 2016








New Year - New Opportunities

As I say goodbye to 2015 and move into 2016, my heart is filled with hope.  The past year has been extremely difficult - health problems, living 400 miles from the DH and the critters for an entire year, moving a farm 400 miles with winter threatening, squeezing the contents of a 2600 square foot house (and four large dogs) into a 1700 square foot house built in 1905.  But now 2016 presents a world of opportunities for us and I can't wait to get started. Change is powerful.  It is uncomfortable and often frightening, but it is also transforming.  I am excited to see where it takes us!

In December 2014, we made the difficult decision to move.  We knew it was likely to be a losing proposition from a real estate perspective, but we knew business opportunities would always be limited where we were.  I was tired of the long cold winters and the short summers.  I didn't want to live 3 hours from the closest amenities or equine veterinary care anymore.  Although where we lived was strikingly beautiful with unlimited outdoor recreation opportunities, the stress of my job and trying to eek out a living there made life extremely difficult.  We needed a change and when the opportunity presented itself, we really had to take it.

The move took a total of 9 months.  As the house lingered on the market with no offers - even after two price reductions, I began to lose hope that we would ever escape.  I had to move for work so DH was stuck taking care of the farm, trying to keep the failing house in 'showing shape' and still find time to work.  I moved into a 400 square foot isolated cabin with just the basic amenities and a lot of arachnid roommates.  On a positive note, I had lots of time and motivation to train for my first sprint triathalon which I completed (in 2 hours!) in July.  This was a major accomplishment for me as I was diagnosed in October 2014 with exercise induced asthma and an over-reactive respiratory system - basically I suck at breathing and any kind of irritant (smoke, dust, etc) or exertion causes a reaction.


We finally accepted a very low offer on our home and were so fortunate to find 44 acres of heaven to purchase.  It was late September - we had no money or time to build a house - so we bought a little house in town to hunker down in for the winter.  The chickens live in the backyard, the dogs are crowded and not big fans of all the 'town noise', most of our things are in storage - but we are all in one place.  Winter was coming so hay had to be bought and secured, a well had to be dug, fence installed, water lines buried and stock tanks installed.  Thankfully, fall lingered on enabling us to construct all the critical infrastructure.  It's a little inconvenient to drive 30 miles roundtrip to feed horses twice a day but we are managing.

And now - the wheel of the Earth is turning, bringing us into a new year and new opportunities.  I am bursting with excitement over the many ideas and choices for our blank canvas of land.  Which brings me to the point of all of this!  With all the cool things we plan to accomplish in the upcoming years to turn our bare ground into a self-sustaining farm - I thought - heck!  I should start an online blog to share our experiences good and bad.  Our new website is under construction - the blog will be located at www.ourprairiefarm.com.  We will have stories of our adventures, gardening tips, recipes, pitfalls we encounter, solar energy, sustainability - who knows what will end up there.  I really hope you will join us on our journey!  I think it will be fun and there will be interesting tidbits of information that you may find useful.  Let's GO!

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Happy Thanksgiving peeps!
I hope this post finds everyone well and happily smelling good things cooking.  This is a day of thanks. Today I am very thankful for my family.  I am so happy to have everyone living in the same county again.  I am also thankful for my gainful employment which allows me the luxury of owning a home, having beautiful black horses, and the ability to do crafty things.  I have really been enjoying the exploration of my crafty side lately.  But on this day of thanks - we won't discuss that.  More to come so stay tuned! Gobble gobble!

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Gluten-free Experimentin'

Hi y'all!
Been a few days since my last post.
I've been working on gluten-free CRACKERS.
We are cheese and cracker kind of snackers - hey that rhymes!  So I decided to try out a few recipes and see what I think.  My first impression is that crackers are WAAAAAYYYYY easier to mess around with than cakes.  Cakes are for advanced gluten-free bakers.....I learned that the hard way...always trying to be a high-achiever...but I digress.  Back to crackers.  Yes, many yummy recipes out there and I have even been changing things up a little.  So far my fave is the parmesan cracker I made first and messed with most.

The recipe looks like this:
3/4 c flax meal
3/4 c almond flour
2 egg whites (I substituted 3Tbs water and 1Tbs tahini in round two - yummy!)
1 Tbs parmesan cheese
1 Tbs coconut oil
2 Tbs nutritional yeast (found at the health food store in bulk)
1/4 tsp sea salt
black pepper, onion and garlic powder for flav-ah

Line cookie sheet with parchment.  Place ball o dough in center and using a wax paper shield, roll out til impossibly thin.  Thinner than you think you can go.  Score with pizza cutter - bake at 350 degrees for 15- 20 minutes.  Break apart when cool enough to handle.   These are super tasty and really easy.

Very yummy with the homemade hummus - will post that recipe tomorrow.


Monday, January 13, 2014

Cake Disaster

It's a cake, it's pile of goo, it's delicious!

Okay so the first attempt at gluten-free cake did not go so well.  Tastes great but is just a pile of cake with no shape to it.  It fell out of the mold in pieces.  A mound of gooey, albeit incredibly tasty cake mess.  I probably should have started with a bona fide gluten free cake recipe but not me!  I used a regular pound cake recipe and just substituted coconut oil for part of the butter and a combination of almond and coconut flour for the flour.  Of course it was a recipe I'd never tried before so I probably should have done something safer - but who wants to be safe when charging forward into gluten-free eating!


Sunday, January 12, 2014

Introducing - the Breakfast Bowl!

Weekends at Black Dog Ranch are breakfast bowl days.  My husband is used to finding all kinds of weird things in his bowl.  Breakfast bowls are awesome!  The foundation of the breakfast bowl is eggs but for the other ingredients - all bets are off!  I essentially clean out the fridge and call it breakfast.  These are tasty, filling, and an awesome way to use up leftovers from the week.  I'll give you the basic recipe but really the Breakfast Bowl is about experimentation!

Sunday Breakfast Bowl

some kind of meat - this can be traditional breakfast meat like sausage or bacon
or
chop up leftover chicken, pork chops, steak

vegetables - today I used fresh spinach, tomato, avocado, and leftover squash

eggs - 2 per person is about right

cheese - feta, cheddar, blue - whatever you have around


Cook the meat in a large frying pan.  Add the veggies.  Get everything nice and warm, then dump in the lightly beaten eggs.  Cook until eggs are done.  Split into bowls - add some cheese and a dab of salsa.  ENJOY!

Some of my favorite combos are chicken/avocado/mushroom; sausage/spinach/feta; bacon/tomato/avocado.....you really can't go wrong!


Friday, January 10, 2014

My Gluten Free Life

So I decided to take Matt and I into the gluten-free zone.  Why?  Because I noticed that my stomach would hurt a lot of times after a meal.  I woke up each morning with a stuffed up head and swollen joints.  We're in week two.  So far it hasn't been too hard.  We weren't big gluten eaters to begin with and we don't eat much in the way of processed foods.  I ordered some almond flour and coconut flour - but haven't really needed it yet.  Mostly just eating fresh veggies and meat.  Lunch has been a bit challenging for me at work but sticking to yummy soups.


Knowing me, experimentin' is in my future so I'll keep y'all posted on any new and wonderful recipes I come up with.