Thursday, September 8, 2011

Spinach

As a child, i didn't care to eat spinach. Of course, the only way that I knew spinach to be was in the form of a block, frozen, cooked down to a shrivel.

As an adult, I discovered my love of fresh spinach in salads. And more recently I began to wonder what more creative ways i could incorporate spinach into my meals.

Here's what I came up with:

I followed this recipe for spinach soup (I omitted the croutons). 


And I have also been a fan of chopping up spinach and adding it to almost any dish.  Last night, I added it to the 15 bean stew that I made over the weekend:



I also like to use fresh spinach:
  • as a lettuce substitute in tacos
  • as the base for a salad
  • as an add-in for pasta salad
What ways do you use spinach?

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Black bean enchiladas


This is an original recipe by me. Recipes by Raime (lol)

Normally I am VERY recipe-dependent.  I need a paper with a list of ingredients and directions to tell me how to cook something. 

But this time, the creative mood struck me by surprise.  

I had been thinking of making enchiladas for a couple of weeks now. I even had it on my list of "recipes to make" on the list app on my phone (yes, I am a nerd).  

But I didn't feel like making chicken enchiladas, and although I love cheese, I wanted something more healthy than cheese-stuffed enchiladas.  I had a boat-load of black bean cans in my pantry that were begging to be used, and that's when i came up with this:



 Black bean enchiladas

one can black beans (drained and rinsed)
one can diced tomatoes
1/4 to 1/3 of a large onion, diced small
one small can diced green chilis
1 tsp cumin
8-10 small corn tortillas
shredded cheese for topping


Preheat oven on Broil.
Combine black beans, onion, green chilis, cumin, and 1/2 can diced tomatoes (drained).
Take 1/3 of that mixture and pulse in a food processor until smooth
Take another 1/3 of the mixture and pulse in food processor just until chunky
Leave the last 1/3 of the mixture as-is (whole).  combine all three.
Fill tortillas with mixture, roll, place seam-down in a casserole dish sprayed with oil.
Broil for 5-7 minutes or until tortillas are slightly golden brown on top.
Cover with salsa (or the remainder of the drained diced tomatoes) and some shredded cheese and bake just until cheese is melted.

Filling mixture (the cumin really adds something special to the flavor of this):



Little enchilada babies ready to be broiled:

cheesy, fiber-y glory:





 I'm not gonna lie---this was REALLY GOOD.  I'm rather proud of this recipe.  It tastes great, it is vegetarian, and it is full of protein and fiber so it will satisfy even a meat-eater's hunger.