Whenever I see in season things on sale I try them. It's really opened up my diet and allowed me to play around with things I wouldn't have tried before. Tried a couple of new things for me recently:
Acorn Squash - Brushed with olive oil and sprinkled with paprika and parm. Wasn't my thing, but it gave me some solid ideas for round 2 and ideas on how I'd like to cook it.
Acorn Squash 2 - This one I steamed for half the time, then drained the baking dish, brushed the pieces with butter and sprinkled brown sugar and cinnamon on them then broiled them for the rest of the time. Came out amazing.
Oven Baked Turnips - Tried swapping potatoes for turnips in my oven baked fries recipe, I like them so much more.
Fruit Brûlée - This was an odd one from Joy of Cooking. Berries topped with sour cream then brown sugar and tossed under the broiler/torched. It was really good.
Apple season, so the yearly debate on which apples are best and how to best bake them is on. I'm really happy with my latest result, but I'm the only one who prefers them to be firmer than apple sauce.
I went for another round of those protein brownies I posted about before. I omitted the baking powder to try to get them more "fudgy". The default recipe is really good as a muffin because it's so cakey, but if I'm calling this a brownie I'd like it to be more dense. They tasted fine, but I wasn't into the texture. I want to experiment with this further, but I haven't made a lot of brownies in my life so I'm not sure what else to mess with to get them to that dense brownie consistency.
Does anyone have a decent recipe that uses Quinoa? I have a bag of it in my pantry and I have no idea what to do with it.
I love adding quinoa any chance I get. If something calls for rice, I usually replace it with white quinoa. Almost weekly I do stir fry with quinoa at this point, it's so easy to meal prep and just have a few bowls in the fridge. I love it in stuffed peppers as well. If you're using it as a replacement for rice, use white because the texture is more uniform. If it's the main focus, tri-color comes out a lot nicer for things like a baked quinoa. I can also say I've tried the linked meatloaf recipe, I wrote down that it didn't shape well on the pan for me and that I'd try a loaf pan next time.
Made a bangin' lentil soup, fry some bacon, onions, carrots n swede then add two ham stock cubes and a glass of lentils and leave it to boil then blend it.
I did something similar. This was my first time blending it, but I decided to only blend half so I could still have vegetable chunks.