
In addition to wanting to eat well and be healthy, I want to be frugal and not waste food. This morning I did both by trying a plate from this book, “Fat for Fuel Ketogenic Cookbook” and modifying it to use what was in my refrigerator. The cookbook does not give calorie count and nutrients for each recipe but I actually found that refreshing. None of the recipes have empty calories and the serving sizes are moderate, so I can focus on enjoying good food instead of counting everything that can be counted.
I’m a Sam’s Club shopper for many reasons – one being that they carry some good organic fruit, vegetable and salad ingredients. The husband had shopped there too, right before I returned home from a five-week absence. He had bought their wonderful, but rather large box of spring mix and it was fairly screaming to be used before it died. I decided we would eat greens for breakfast.
What we call greens is a mysterious bunch of leafy vegetables. They can be the leaves of lettuce, chard, or spinach, or the above ground part of root vegetables like beets or turnips. The mysterious part is that when you eat them fresh and uncooked as in a salad, a couple cups of them look like a lot of food. When you cook a couple cups of them, they wilt and look like a spoonful or two – big difference. So, if you have a lot of greens to use up, get a recipe calling for wilted greens.
I also buy garlic at Sam’s club even though the bag is, again, rather large. It is a good price however, and having a lot of it makes me search for ways to use it. I know it is good for me. Today’s recipe had garlic and greens, which was perfect.
I wouldn’t ordinarily need instructions for poaching eggs but these instructions were interesting and made sense to me so I tried them. The recipe calls for boiling salted water in the pan, with the addition of 2 teaspoons of vinegar. Next came the interesting part which was to stir and get the water moving in a circular pattern before cracking the eggs into the center. I’m not sure it made a lot of difference but it made me feel like a fancy cook.
I enjoyed the breakfast. The husband didn’t say anything. I think he is just glad I’m back cooking again.
I’m wondering, what does it take to make you feel like a “fancy cook”?
Like you, I love ❤️ making a beautiful plate of food with whatever is in the fridge and in the cupboards. Must be the Boone in us.
Extensive preparation, exotic spices, and delicate sauces. More than three pans. lol
That’s the kind of fancy I don’t do very often. Too lazy, just sayin’…
Haha, I’m not saying I do that very often any more, but when I do, I feel fancy. I’m more a basic comfort food kind of cook on a daily basis. 🙂