Sunday, October 28, 2012

Pie Pumpkins are for More Than Pies!

I'm a Freak for Fall. Plain and simple. Other than leaves, what is the iconic symbol of Fall? You are absolutely correct: Pumpkins. Unfortunately, they are overlooked as a Fall meal staple, because of the seasonal type-casting for pies and Jack o' Lanterns.



So, in this entry, I offer these 2 wonderfully easy recipes of respect for the lone orange lovelies-Pumpkins. You can find most of the ingredients at Leafy Greens!

Vegetarian Cheese-Stuffing Pie Pumpkin



Warm, cheesy garlic bread stuffed and roasted in a sweet pie pumkin. Need I say more? Enjoy this mouth-watering pumpkin dinner on a chilly fall night!

Ingredients

• 1 pie-pumpkin (Found at Leafy Greens $1.99)
• 8 oz cheddar cheese (or, a combination of your favorites) grated
 • one 12-14 inch baguette, or hard bread of choice
• 1 Tbsp butter (Found at Leafy Greens)
• 1 Tbsp Taste by Design Garlic Oil (Found at Leafy Greens)
• 1 large shallot, minced
• 3 clove of garlic, minced
• 1/8 cup fresh sage, chopped (half, if using dried herb)
• 1/8 cup rosemary, chopped (half, if using dried herb)
• 2 1/2 - 3 cups vegetable stock (as vegetarian option), preferably homemade
• Salt and pepper to taste

Directions:
 Preheat oven to 350 F.
Cut off the top of the pumpkin and remove the seeds and strings.
 Heat butter and olive oil on low.
Add shallot, garlic, and sage, and cook until sage goes brown and crispy.
Add rosemary and cook, stirring, for another minute or two.
Cut the baguette into to 1 1/2 in. pieces.

Place a layer of bread, cheese and shallot-herb mixture in the bottom. Then, layer with more bread, more cheese, and more shallots and herbs, repeating until everything is used up and the pumpkin is full.
Squish it down to compress the bread and cheese as much as possible.
Then pour stock over it until the bread and cheese is well-saturated. Replace the pumpkin lid.
Bake at 350 F for 2 to 2 1/2 hours.
You want the pumpkin flesh soft, but not mushy, and you want to take it out of the oven before the structure collapses.
Scoop out the pumpkin flesh from the sides to serve.
Serve with a green salad on the side. Makes 4 servings.

 I couldn't resist sharing this down-home comfort-food recipe. LOVE!



NOT a Vegetarian Stuffed Pie Pumpkin
Ingredients: 

• 1-Pie Pumpkin (Found at Leafy Greens $1.99)
• 1 lb. Natural Osage Beef ground beef (Leafy Greens freezer)
• 1/2 lb. Darby Creek Pork sausage (Leafy Greens freezer)
• 1/2 cup chopped onion
• 1 cup chopped celery
 • 1 Hemmergarn Farms Free-range egg, slightly beaten (Leafy Greens refrigerator)
• 1/2 cup water
• 1/2 cup bread or cracker crumbs*
• 1 tsp Keystone Beef Stock (Found at Leafy Greens)
• 1 tsp each of parsley, sage rosemary and thyme (singing optional)
• 3 Tbsp Taste By Design Basil Oil (Found at Leafy Greens)

Directions:
 Preheat oven to 350 degrees F
Clean your pumpkin, washing the outside and scooping out the seeds. Salt the interior of pumpkin.
Keep the top; you’ll use it as a cover during cooking.
Brown the ground meat with the onion and celery; drain and cool slightly.
Mix in the egg, water, beef stock, herbs and oil Salt & pepper to taste.  
Stuff the pumpkin with the meat mixture and replace the top.
Place on a cookie sheet or in a shallow pan and bake at 350 degrees F for 1 1/2-2 hours, or until you can easily pierce the pumpkin with a fork.
Slice and serve

For a finishing touch, drizzle some Shagbark Hickory Syrup (Found at Leafy Greens) over it. Delish!

*For gluten free options, you can crumb: 1/2 cup Mary’s Gone Crackers gluten free crackers of choice Or 1/2 cup Eban Bakery gluten free bread of choice (Both found at Leafy Greens)

Bon Appétit!

Saturday, October 27, 2012

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Monday, October 8, 2012

Honey, Our Allergy Hero!


The evil King Ragweed.
Allergies are miserable, and Ragweed is King Antecedent of them all. His seasonal rule begins every year on, or around August 15th and ends late September or early October. Don’t discount His Heinous' power! His pollen can travel over a hundred miles and stays afloat in the air well into October and early November. You may not see Ragwood lurking around, but the minions “Leaf Mold” and “Mold Spore” do his  evil bidding and perform their dastardly damage through the end of November!




Knight Honey. (*wish*)




Luckily, we can call on Nature’s Knight of the Realm, Honey! 




Relief from our allergies can come from local honey. 
How, pray tell, does this work? 
I’m glad you asked!

Honey acts like an immunization. Your hay fever allergies are caused by pollen in your local area. Bees collect pollen from local plants, and small amounts of it are transferred to their honey. As you ingest local honey, you receive local pollen in small amounts. This, in turn, works like a series of allergy shots; slowly building up your tolerance to the allergen, and decreasing your allergy symptoms.

Raw honey vs. Pasteurized is the question! Many farmers gently warm harvested honey in order to get it easily into jars. Temperatures below 115F do not affect honey’s natural enzymes and beneficial attributes.  We can destroy the very things we need from honey by adding it to hot drinks! The most effective way to take honey is by ingesting 2-3 teaspoons daily for a few months before and through pollen season.

So, Knight Honey destroyed the evil King Ragweed and his evil minions “Leaf Mold” and “Mold Spore.”  And, everyone lived happily ever after…


Note: Raw honey should not be feed to children under the age of one. Honey normally cannot support bacteria, but one bacterium that can survive and is usually benign, C. botulinum, can be dangerous to infants. By the age of one, the immune system of most infants is developed enough to resist the bacteria.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Top 10 Things that say "Fall"

1. Crispy-cool air scented with wild colored leaves.
2. Zipped up hoodies and no more flip-flops.
3. Pumpkins and Cornstalks decorating Kroger.
4. Hot Pumpkin Spice coffee. Cream and Sugar, please.
5. Honeycrisp Apples. Anytime. Anywhere.
6. Scarlet and Gray. Everywhere.
7. Hearing the Grove City Marching Band practice off in the distance.
8. Piles of leaves along the curb, begging me to drive through them!
9. Warm socks.
10. October 26, 2012. Fall back, say good-bye to daylight savings time and enjoy an extra hour of sleep!