Sage-Rubbed Pork chops with Warm Apple Slaw for CEiMB

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What a nice cold weather dish was chosen for this week’s Craving Ellie in My Belly by Jen B’s Cooking Carveout Breach of the Recipeace. Rick and I are both very fond of another dish we cook – Pork with Apples and Onions and while I don’t think this dish will replace that- it’s still a very scrumptious variation on the theme.

The recipe can be found in The Food You Crave by Ellie Krieger on page #195. It consists of pork chops rubbed with garlic, salt, pepper and sage, browned on both sides and then held whilst you prepare a warm pan slaw of apples, onions, sage, cabbage and carrots  with cider vinegar and then returned to the pan to finish with a bit of chicken broth.

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The recipe calls for bone-in pork chops and green cabbage but I only had boneless pork loin chops and red cabbage so I used those. It’s probably a bit tastier with the bone-in chops but I actually preferred the red cabbage – the cider vinegar in the recipe sets the color so it remains bright and colorful.

Try it you’ll like it!

xo

Crock Pot Black Beans

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I love to cook with the crock pot in Winter-okay really anytime.  It’s so easy and it holds the extra bonus of permeating the house with good smells and a real coziness to come home to after a long cold day.

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Beans in the crock pot are super easy and I find black beans really satisfying. I read somewhere too that black beans can be very purifying for your kidneys plus they are loaded with protein and fiber- so what’s not to like? They can be a main dish, a side or the base for other meals such as chili with beans or soup.

Crock Pot Black Beans

  • 1 pound dried black beans, picked over and rinsed.
  • water to soak
  • 1 or 2 medium onions, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 jar of prepared salsa (use a kind you like green or red), or 2 cups home made salsa
  • broth- chicken or vegetable to cover soaked beans
  • ham bone- optional- obviously leave out for vegetarian beans- you might want to add  other flavorings if you leave it out.

All you need to do is pick over the beans for small stones or any other foreign matter, rinse them and soak in about four times the volume of water to beans for about eight hours. If you do this before you go to bed you can throw the beans in the crock pot in the morning to cook away all day. Once the beans are soaked, drain them and put them in the pot with the other ingredients. If you want to keep them vegan or lower in fat leave the ham bone out- but it does add a lot to flavor for very little extra added fat and calories. Cover the lot with the broth- the beans will soak up a lot of the liquid as they continue to soften and cook. Set the pot to whatever time you want the beans ready- or if your pot doesn’t have set times use high for about four hours or low for eight.

Serve over rice or in a bowl as a side dish. Leftovers beans can be used in other recipes such as the soup recipe I’ll post in the next few days.

We enjoyed them as a side for a pork tenderloin that was also cooked in a crock pot – I’ll post that too soon.

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Enjoy!

xo

On Scones… Orange Blueberry Almond Scones

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For me one of the benefits of cold weather is that Rick and I get to share tea fairly frequently. One of us will skulk about the kitchen  hovering near the stove and suddenly turn with a smile to the other and say ” How about a nice cup of tea?”

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Last Sunday, as the snow fell from the sky in huge flakes, we cancelled plans to go out to a movie- The Sundance Film Festival was overrunning our favorite cinema house so we avoided the crowd and snuggled up together on the couch with a tea tray and a DVD of “The Wizard of Oz” By the way -those flying monkeys with the blue faces-um they still freak me out just a wee bit. But still- a perfect Winter’s afternoon. Grab the good stuff as you can I always think.

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Somehow I always put tea and oranges together in my mind (lyrics from the Leonard Cohen song Suzanne-“..and she feeds you tea and oranges that come all the way from China” inevitably sings out in the background) so there must be a sliced or quartered orange and if we’re lucky there will be a homemade biscuit or a scone. These scones go very well with a nice pot of Earl Grey tea. As for the blueberries I think using dried works so well- it makes them a bit like currant scones but with blueberry flavour and they don’t turn all grey-blue as they tend to do when you use fresh or frozen.

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Blueberry Orange Almond Scones

  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon Ceylon Cinnamon
  • 1/2 cup cold butter
  • 1 cup whole dried Blueberries
  • finely grated zest from one whole orange
  • 1 cup chopped almonds
  • 1/2 cup buttermilk
  • 1 large egg
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 beaten egg for topping
  • Turbinado (raw) sugar for topping
  • 2 ounces almond paste crumbled, optional for topping

Put the flour, sugar, baking powder, soda and salt in a medium bowl and whisk to combine. Cut the cold butter into small pieces and cut into the flour with a pastry cutter or rub between your fingers until the mixture resembles coarse bread crumbs with a few pea sized butter pieces remaining. Add the blueberries and almonds and stir in. Mix the buttermilk, one large egg, zest and extract together. Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients and add the buttermilk mixture. Stir just until combined and the dough starts to pull away from the bowl. Dump out onto a lightly floured work surface and knead only a few times until the dough holds together. Don’t over work as with most short doughs.

At this point you can form small handfuls of the dough into balls and place on parchment lined baking trays or you can pat out into a large circle, brush with a little beaten egg and sprinkle with the raw sugar and scatter the crumbled almond paste evenly over the top, place the round on a parchment lined or lightly greased baking tray, cut into 8 wedges and separate slightly (a bench scraper works great for this job) and bake in a preheated 375F oven for about 20-25 minutes or until golden and risen and just springs back slightly when very lightly touched in the center.

Serve warm or room temperature. They will keep well covered for a day or two but are best the day they are baked.

Enjoy the Winter as you can and hold on for Spring!

xo