10-Minute Side Dish: Tex-Mex Zucchini

10 minute side dish, Low-carb, Mexican, My Tasteful Life, Paleo, side dish, spices, Zucchini

Since it’s still summer, zucchini continues to be abundant and on sale. Finding new ways to prepare it gives me a fun challenge, and my recent blog post on Zucchini Crisps turned out to be a delightful experiment. Today I’m sharing my Tex-Mex Zucchini. IMG_3463

Eating Mexican food doesn’t mean you must have beans and rice as a side dish. If you’re following a Paleo diet, then those items are prohibited anyway. Here’s a perfect low-carb side dish that takes just 10 minutes to make and pairs perfectly with any Mexican-inspired meal.

The unique ingredient is dried chipotle pepper flakes. Traditional in Southwestern and Mexican cuisine, chipotle peppers are smoke-dried jalapenos. Because they are dried, these peppers have a less intense heat than fresh jalapenos or dried red pepper flakes.

Chipotle peppers have a sweeter, smokier heat that tends to linger on the lips. If you truly dislike anything hot, then try reducing the chipotle pepper flakes to a half teaspoon on your first attempt.

This dish only takes 10 minutes to cook, but I like to let zucchini marinate in the chipotle pepper flakes and oil for at least 5 minutes before cooking. This dish serves three, so double it if you’re feeding a crowd.

Ingredients

1 large zucchini, sliced into 1/2″ rounds

1/2 red onion, sliced

2 tablespoons coconut oil or olive oil

1 teaspoon chipotle pepper flakes

1 teaspoon kosher salt

Process

Mix the zucchini rounds, red onion, oil and chipotle pepper flakes in a bowl. Let sit for 5 to 15 minutes.

When the zucchini is done marinating, heat a dry pan on medium-high heat for 1 minute. Then add the zucchini mixture and sauté for 6 minutes, stirring regularly. Add the kosher salt and stir.

Turn the heat up to high and keep stirring for 2 more minutes. Turn off heat and keep warm until you’re ready to serve your meal.

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Introducing Cauli-rice: Your New Paleo Side

Asian, Coconut Milk, Herbs, Indian, Paleo, side dish, Spanish

Paleo cooking is packed with flavor, but one of the things I miss most are side dishes like rice, couscous and potatoes. While I can happily abstain from these less-than-healthy sides, it’s harder to ask my friends and family to adhere to my Paleo regimen. IMG_2597

Therefore, I’ve been trying to be creative and have come to love cauliflower rice – a.k.a. cauli-rice. Cauliflower can be transformed into a rice-like texture by using a good blender or cheese grater. Such a mild vegetable, cauliflower absorbs whatever flavors used in its cooking process.

Basic cauli-rice can be as simple as a large skillet, a grated head of cauliflower, a tablespoon of healthy fats, and 1/3 cup of chicken broth. However, by adding basic ingredients such as garlic, onion, and fresh herbs, you can create flavorful combinations that enhance your main dish while satisfying guests and families alike.

Saffron Cauil-rice

Saffron Cauil-rice

Even if you don’t follow a Paleo lifestyle, you can treat this cauli-rice like risotto. Add some saffron and peas. Or try it with mushrooms, cream and parmesan cheese. The options are endless once you grate the cauliflower and treat it like rice.

Hand-grating the cauliflower may take a little elbow grease, but a blender makes this recipe much easier. The key is to crumble the cauliflower in batches. You also need to pulse the blender to ensure that you don’t over-grind the cauliflower florets.

Below I’ve shared one of my favorite ways to make cauli-rice. This combination of cilantro, lime and coconut works great with all Asian, Indian and Spanish cuisines.

Cilantro and Coconut Cauliflower Rice

Ingredients

1 small head of cauliflower or bag of pre-cut cauliflower

1 tablespoon ghee, coconut oil or olive oil

1 teaspoon sea salt

2 cloves garlic, chopped

1/2 cup onions, chopped

1/4 cup red pepper, chopped

1/2 cup cilantro leaves, roughly chopped

1/2 cup light coconut milk

1 lime, juiced

Process

Create the cauli-rice by cutting the cauliflower head into large chunks. In your blender, pulse each section individually until it has a rice-like texture. Remove any large fragments that don’t shred and save them for later or discard.

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Once you’ve riced all of the cauliflower, melt your oil or ghee in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the onion, pepper and garlic and sauté for 3-5 minutes. Add the cauli-rice and spread over the entire surface area of the pan. Press down and let cook for 2-3 minutes, and then mix. Continue to sauté for 5 minutes.

Then add the lime juice and coconut milk, reduce the heat to low, and cover. Cook for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally until all the liquid has been absorbed. Add salt and cilantro, stir and serve.

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Sautéed Spinach with Goat Cheese

10 minute side dish, food, Paleo, side dish, Spinach, tips, vegetables

In Florida, spinach and snap beans (a.k.a. green beans) reach their peak in March so you can buy a lot for a little bit of money (click here for a complete list of Florida vegetables by season). Both spinach and snap beans make healthy side dishes but sometimes we need inspiration to create something different. Steamed green beans get boring, and I don’t know about you, but I can only eat so much spinach in my salads.

Don’t let your side dishes end up as an obligatory sidekick to your meal’s main element. Instead, look for ways to doctor up the usual to create something new. The key to side dishes is that they can’t take up a lot of time. They are SIDE dishes, after all. But that doesn’t mean they can’t be fulfilling and add a satisfying element to your meal.

Below I’ve included a 10-minute recipe for spinach sautéed with garlic and goat cheese. It’s simple to prepare and is a great way to use all that spinach you picked up at the farmers market or store. Don’t forget that spinach shrinks dramatically as it cooks, so be prepared to use at least six to eight cups to feed four people.

I paired this luscious side dish with a grilled New York strip steak. I didn’t even miss eating the roasted potatoes I made my husband because the spinach had plenty of fulfilling flavor. Check back later this week to get another 10-minute side dish that’s perfect for a Paleo-inspired diet.

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Ingredients

2 tablespoons olive oilIMG_0348

2 garlic cloves, minced

1/4 cup onion, minced

1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

1/4 teaspoon white or black pepper

2 oz. goat cheese (use 1/4 oz. per cup of spinach)

6-8 cups fresh spinach

Cooking

Using a deep skillet or shallow pot, sauté garlic and onion in olive oil over medium-high heat for 3 minutes. Add the spinach and stir so every leaf is coated with the hot oil. Season with salt and pepper. Add cheese in chunks and gently combine. Turn off heat, cover, and let sit for 2 minutes. Stir again and serve immediately.

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Winter Vegetable Medley

Leftovers, Paleo, roasting, side dish, sunday supper, tips, vegetables

Parsnips and butternut squash abound this time of year, but it can be hard to come up with ideas to incorporate them. Most people haven’t cooked parsnips before and aren’t sure where to start. Parsnips look somewhat like white carrots, and you peel them the same way, but they have a distinct root vegetable flavor.

I am always trying to find ways to reduce the starches and incrIMG_0483ease the vegetables we eat. Butternut squash is one of those wonderful vegetables that has a similar texture and taste of a sweet potato, but isn’t as sugary. It doesn’t get stringy or watery like other types of squash sometimes do, so it really stands up to roasting.

With a couple of Yukon gold potatoes, these winter vegetables bake together and caramelize nicely. Even children don’t seem to notice how many vegetables they’re enjoying, so that’s another win when feeding a family.

This side dish recipe easily feeds four to six people. I was only serving three, so I wound up with enough left over for the next night. It’s really nice to have a significant part of today’s meal already completed. This savory vegetable and potato medley worked great with the pompano fish I grilled last night, and I’m sure it will pair perfectly with roasted lamb chops this evening.

 

Ingredients

3 garlic cloves, minced

1 shallot, chopped

2 medium Yukon gold potatoes

1 medium butternut squash

4 parsnips

2 teaspoons salt

1 teaspoon thyme

1/2 teaspoon white pepper

1/2 teaspoon garlic powder

3 tablespoons olive oil

3 tablespoons balsamic vinegar

 

Cooking

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Peel parsnips like you would peel a carrot, then slice into 1/4-inch slices. Remove the skin from the squash by carefully cutting between the skin and the orange flesh. Then remove the seeds and stringy inside, like you would if you were cleaning out a pumpkin. Then cut squash into 1/2-inch chunks. Cut potatoes into 1/2-inch chunks as well.

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Mix the minced garlic and shallots with the parsnips, squash and potatoes in a large bowl. Add olive oil, salt, garlic powder, white pepper and thyme and stir. Place the medley on a greased cookie sheet in single layer. Bake for 20 minutes and stir.

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Bake for another 15 minutes. Pour balsamic vinegar over the vegetables and gently combine. Cook for 5 more minutes and serve when ready.

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