Kale Salad with Togarashi

Kale Salad with Togarashi

Kale Salad with Togarashi, Apple, Sweet Nuts, and Cranberries

Kale Salad with Togarashi, Apples, Pecorino, Sweet Almonds and Dried Cranberries

This is one of my favorite salads. With Kale being one of the highest nutrient rich foods (and ANDI score of 1000), I try to squeeze this in my dinners as often as possible. The most important thing with kale is that you can’t have it dry, it really needs a lot of love, which translates to oil! First you needs to make sure your kale is washed, which sometimes, takes wiping down the front and back of every leaf. You then need to completely dry it, because as well all know, oil and water don’t mix. Next you have the remove larger ribs that run down the center. Then you cut all of the leafs off. Try to keep them in large pieces. You then stack a series of leaves and roll them, like rolling a cigar. You will have a tightly wound up spiral of leaves. You then cut ⅛” thick (or thin) so you have small strands of leaves, like in photo above. Once all of the leaves have been nicely cut into thin and long pieces, place them into a bowl. Now you give it some love, pour in the EVO Oil into a bowl and toss around so that all of the pieces get a nice coating of oil, this is what softens it up. Next add apples, dried cranberries, chopped sweet almonds, pecorino and toss well to cover all ingredients in oil. Your last step is to add the Japanese red pepper (Togarashi). I would add this slowly, then toss around and see how much is enough for your individual taste. Some people love the red pepper spice, others have less tolerance for hot foods (like my husband). It does contain a bit of salt, so just keep tasting to see if you need additional salt in your salad.

Ingredients:

  • Large bunch of Curly Kale
  • 2 tbsp EVOO (olive oil)
  • 1 Gala Apple (thinly sliced)
  • ⅓ cup Dried Cranberries
  • ⅓ cup Sweet almonds (chopped)
  • ½ cup of shredded pecorino cheese
  • ½-1 tsp Togarashi (Japanese Spice)
  • ¼ tsp salt (optional)
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Curly Kale

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Kale with ribs removed

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Rolled Kale leaves rolled

I also found some interesting information about Kale from Dr. Perlmutter (author of Grain Brain). I have included it here, but you can also visit this link to read the rest.

Kale, a member of the cabbage family, is power packed with vitamins A, K, C, with meaningful amounts of B vitamins as well as trace minerals. It’s low in carbs and calories. Kale is rich in a chemical called sulforaphane, and this may be one of kale’s most important health attributes.

Sulforaphane is a sulfur-rich chemical that activates a gene pathway in animals as well as humans called Nrf2, and when Nrf2 is turned on by consuming sulforaphane rich foods, several important health-promoting mechanisms are accentuated. These include a reduction in inflammation, enhanced antioxidant protection, and powerful amplification of our ability to detoxify potential damaging chemicals.

Ricotta Pasta with Tomatoes

Ricotta Pasta with Tomatoes

 

Ricotta Pasta with Tomatoes, basil, garlic and mozzarella

Here is a fun, lighter spaghetti dish with ricotta, mozzarella, basil, garlic, cherry tomatoes and parmesan. My son loves ricotta and if he has his preference he would pretty much add it to anything.

Ingredients:

  • ¼ cup Olive oil
  • 6 cloves chopped Garlic
  • 10-15 cherry tomatoes (slices in half)
  • ½ cup chopped Burrata (or fresh mozzarella cheese)
  • ½ cup of whole milk organic Ricotta cheese
  • ½ tsp Red Pepper Flakes (chili)
  • 1 cup Roasted tomatoes sliced
  • 1 box of spaghetti (barilla or other Italian brand)
  • salt as needed
  • 10 leaves of fresh basil sliced
  • ⅓ cup freshly grated parmesan cheese

Directions:

Boil pasta water (making sure to salt after boiling). In a small sauce pan, add the oil and garlic and cook at medium heat, making sure garlic does not brown. Mix together cherry tomatoes, mozzarella, ricotta, red pepper flakes, and roasted tomatoes. Add ¼ tsp salt and stir. Cook pasta. Strain pasta, saving some of the water. Add olive oil and garlic to ricotta mixture. Stir in pasta to mixture to coat spaghetti well, add additional salt if needed. Serve into shallow pasta bowls, sprinkle with basil and parmesan cheese and serve.   Makes 4 Servings.

 

Organic Hummus

Organic Hummus

My favorite organic Hummus. Ingredients (all organic):

  • 2 cans garbanzo beans
  • 16 oz jar of tahini
  • ½ cup lemon juice
  • 1 cup of flat leaf parsley leaves
  • 4 medium cloves of garlic
  • ¼ tsp Paprika
  • ⅔ cup EVOO
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 tsp of salt (add 1 at a time)

Place garbanzo beans, tahini, lemon, parsley and garlic into blender and  paprika, puree until chopped. Slowly add olive oil while blending, make sure it is well incorporated. For a smooth consistency, slow add water until you reach desired consistency. Add 1 tsp of salt, and taste. If more salt is required add second teaspoon. Sprinkle with a dash of paprika for presentation. Serve with Pita bread, or julienned vegetables.

Breville Food Processor

My favorite Food Processor by Breville

hummus-ingredients

Marinated Salmon

Marinated Salmon

Salmon with Arugula salad

Here is a simple and easy marinade for a tasty baked salmon.

  • 2-3 lbs Wild Caught Salmon*
  • 5 garlic cloves
  • Large bunch of dill
  • 2 tbsp. of dig on mustard
  • Juice if 1 lemon
  • Rock salt
  • 1 tsp. pepper
  • ⅓ cup EVOO

Purée all ingredients in a blender with an “S-shaped” blade, until ingredients are well chopped and it forms a paste. Add marinate and to salmon in a ziplock bag, let most of the air out. Be sure to massage the mixture around the salmon so all areas are well covered. Place in the refrigerator for 3 hours. Take out and let sit at room temperature for ½ hour before baking. Bake Salmon in a baking dish covered with tinfoil or sealed tinfoil at 350 degrees, for 20 minutes or until cooked to desired temperature.

If you prefer a crispy outside and skin, you can sauté the salmon in a pan with olive or butter on high heat, this only takes a couple of minutes per side, which gives you a nice crunchy skin. Great paired with an Arugula salad, tossed with EVOO, balsamic vinegar, goat cheese crumbles and tomatoes.

*I’m not a fan of farm raised as they are “rumors” that they are fed GMO pellets!

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