Monday, August 18, 2014

Chicken Mojo and Kid Friendly Veggies

Every week we meal plan. It's for our sanity. To make a family run smoothly, something has got to give---and we gave up spontaneity! But, our meals are delicious, so it's not much of a sacrifice. We cook everything on the weekends in double batches. Sure it takes time on Sunday, but we don't have to cook anything during the week.

This week, our highlights were...

Mojo Chicken Avocado Cups from Rachael Bryant from Meatified. Think mango, avocado, lime juice, cilantro, and chicken walking into a disco and doing the electric slide on your plate. Amazing. And the kids liked it enough. They like all of the ingredients on their own, but in this plate, they didn't love it as much as I expected. Maybe they were having an off day--they didn't even eat all of the mango! Perhaps it was all of the cilantro.

Mac and cheese with....wait for it...beef and veggies. There is no official recipe for this. We have made it so much, it just comes natural. Maybe we like macaroni and cheese too much! We start by browning some beef. I prefer beefalo; it has more flavor in my opinion.Then we grab some veggies from the fridge or freezer, cut, and cook. We pick kid friendly veggies like carrots, peas, tomatoes, cauliflower, and potatoes. In a large pot we cook a whole bag of gluten free noodles...it does have to make 2 meals for the week...if it makes it that far. When the noodles are done, I put them in the strainer in the sink (bonus points if you don't have to take dirty dishes out the sink to put the strainer in it). In the now empty pot, we make the cheese sauce with almond milk, gluten free flour of choice, cheese, salt, and some other spices depending on our mood. We add the beef, vegetables, and noodles with the sauce, stir, and consume.


Monday, August 4, 2014

Chicken: Humane Choices and Gluten Free


I was a vegetarian for a long time, like 15 years. It was a place I was very comfortable in. Ask me to whip up a vegetarian Thanksgiving, no problem. But ask me to pick up some chicken at the store and my palms get sweaty and my heart pounds nervously. There are so many questions that run through my head...Was the chicken happy? Did it get to go outside? Was it able to move? Will eating this chicken make me sick? Will it kill me? Was it fed hormones and antibiotics? 

But then I found this chart from Greener Choices and now I see the light. Chicken comes with a label on it. On that picture below, see that multicolored circle on the right? That says American Humane Association Certified. If I want to buy raw chicken, it's either this or conventionally raised. It sounds good, "humane," but upon closer inspection, it doesn't settle my chicken-loving heart. The farmers can feed the chickens animal byproducts, they do not need to have access to the outdoors, and there is no limit on slaughter line speed. 



Don't get me wrong, it is better than conventionally raised chicken. And food is food when you come right down to it. But if I'm going to eat meat, I need to know that they were treated like I would treat them. I try to buy whole chickens from farmers I know at the farmer's market and natural food store, but it expensive. As it should be. So, I will keep making the hard choices between humane and money...until we raise our own.

Now that we have that out of the way, lets eat! When you find the chicken you want to eat, here are some great recipes to try. They are all Paleo and/or AIP, but all delicious. Really, try them!

My fav is the Mojo Chicken and Paleo Nuggets. The picture at the top is our try at the chicken nuggets. There were oh so very good!


Paleo Chicken Nuggets 

 Paleo BBQ Chicken with Chipotle Slaw and Poblano Guac

AIP Coconut Lime Ginger Chicken

AIP Herb and Coconut Crusted Chicken Breasts

Mojo Chicken Avocado Cups

Grilled Whole Chicken

And when you buy that whole chicken, don't throw those bones away! Make some broth. It's easy, free, and good for you.

Chicken Bone Broth