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Chicken Soup with Kale, Garlic & Sweet Potatoes

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Sep 28, 2011 at 12:55PM

chicken soup with kale & sweet potatoes

My mom is recovering from major surgery here at our home. She spent the first couple of weeks in a hospital and rehab facility, where the food was...truly awful. I brought her little farmer's market treats like sliced tomatoes and strawberries, to remind her that not all food comes from boxes and cans, but man, the overall effect of feeding healing people crap food is seriously depressing.

She is glad to be here now, noshing what appeals from my endless stream of cooking, and starting to cook for herself again too. She can't eat more than a few bites of anything at a time - and all she's truly hungry for is sweets, ha - but she made herself a killer BLT yesterday, thick with a perfect tomato and a pile of freshly picked lettuce, and managed to eat half of it.

Baby steps on the road to recovery.

chicken soup with kale, garlic & sweet potato

She also managed a few bites of this soup, which really hit the spot on a cool, fall day. I love chicken soup for its endless versatility, and of course for its soothing, healing deliciousness. I studded this version with kale, sweet potatoes, garlic, and just a spot of bacon because my mom loves bacon.

I am of her, after all.

This is a nice transitional soup, warm on a cool day, but full of end-of-summer bounty like a garden-ripe tomato. A hint of nutmeg is lovely here, as is a shower of freshly grated Parmesan to finish.

Chicken Soup with Kale, Garlic & Sweet Potatoes
Serves 6

1 roasting chicken, about 3 lbs., patted dry
1 Tbsp. bacon fat or vegetable oil
2 yellow onions, 1 coarsely chopped, 1 diced
6 cloves garlic, 3 smashed, 3 minced
2 ribs celery, 1 halved, 1 diced
2 carrots, 1 halved, 1 diced
1 tsp. dried thyme
6 c. water
1 tsp. Kosher salt plus more to finish
2 slices bacon, diced
1/2 bunch lacinato (Tuscan) kale, ribs removed, sliced thin
1 large sweet potato, peeled & diced
1/4 tsp. freshly grated nutmeg

1 large garden-ripe tomato, diced
freshly ground black pepper
freshly grated Parmesan cheese

Make the broth:
Preheat oven to 250 degrees F.

Heat a Dutch oven or casserole with a tight fitting lid over medium high heat. Add the bacon fat or oil and when hot, add the chicken and brown it thoroughly all over. Remove chicken to a plate and set aside.

Turn heat to down to medium and add the coarsely chopped onion, 3 cloves of smashed garlic, 1 halved rib of celery, 1 halved carrot, and thyme. Stir around for a few minutes, then slowly add the water and 1 tsp. of salt. Nestle the chicken back into the pot and bring stock to a simmer. Cover and transfer to the oven. (Or, turn heat to low and simmer on top of the stove.)

Bake (or simmer) chicken for 1 1/2 hours, or until chicken is very tender. Remove chicken from the pot to a cutting board (it might break apart into pieces, which is fine) and let cool for a bit.

Strain stock through a colander into a large bowl. Skim fat from stock. Discard strained vegetables.

Make the soup:
Set the Dutch oven over medium heat and add the bacon to the pan. When the bacon is browned and crisp, add the diced onion, diced garlic, diced celery, diced carrot, kale, sweet potato, and nutmeg. Saute for about 10 minutes, stirring a few times, until the onion is softened. Pour in the stock and simmer, uncovered, for 10 minutes or until the carrot and sweet potato are tender.

While the soup simmers, tear the chicken into bite-sized pieces, discarding the skin and bones.

To serve, stir about half of the chicken into the hot soup (reserving the rest for another use) and taste for salt, adding more if necessary. Divide the diced tomato among soup bowls, ladle soup over the tomatoes, top with black pepper and Parmesan cheese, and serve.

18 Comments -- 3,751 Views
Posted By FreshTartSteph on May 12, 2008 at 2:23PM
And now it's Monday. The parties are over, Mother's Day has come and gone, and it's high time to depuff. Bites of pastry, pizza, and lemon tart are lovely, all things in moderation after all... But fresh fruit and vegetables are lovely too, and given the havoc that too many refined carbs, drinks, meat, and dairy wreak on my face and waistline since achieving 40-something, I get downright excited to get back to "normal". Green tea and grapefruit? Woo hoo! The fact is, I have become supremely sensitive to over-indulging (I blow up like a balloon, to put it mildly - see Cancun '08) which is either a sad reminder that I'm aging (I get it already!), or a lucky reminder to, you know, embrace moderation. I'll consider it the latter (snarl).

I actually enjoyed a lovely transition meal last night, at lovely Lucia's, with my lovely mom and sister. I know I say this over and over (and over), but Lucia's does amazingvegetables. I had a cup of pureed tomato soup - no cream, but creamy; perfectly seasoned to taste like soup, not spaghetti sauce (always a risk with tomato soup). All three of us ordered the roasted French-cut chicken breast (boneless, with skin, and the first joint of the wing attached; do any of you ever request this cut from your butcher? I haven't, but I'm going to soon, I'll let you know if they oblige) served alongside a small dollop of mashed potatoes, a tangle of al dente green beans (seasoned with what I'm guessing was butter with a bit of horseradish whisked in - delicious), and wilted greens topped with crunchy walnuts and kalamata olives. Too comforting to be light, but not ridiculously heavy either. Pretty damn perfect.

Tonight? Well, we are not going out for dinner! I'm thinking miso soup and a simple saute of whatever veggies I can scare up from the cooler. More tea, grapes, and a few almonds to finish. Simple and light and clean tasting. My palate (grocery bill, butt, John, dishwasher, eye bags) will thank me.

Moderate it: back-on-track, depuff favorites are green tea, grapefruit, raw almonds, fish, arugula, and kale.
0 Comments -- 6 Views
Posted By FreshTartSteph on Feb 1, 2006 at 11:02AM
Nathan's home with me today, with a fever and feeling tired. I went to check in with him after posting last night and he was sound asleep, at 6:50 p.m. Had fallen asleep doing his homework! Definitely not usual 9-year-old-boy behavior. So today he's lyin' low, watching a little TV, and finishing up the homework he didn't finish last night. I can tell he's probably going to be OK, because he requested a home-made pizza for lunch (!). And I'm willing to make it for him because he hasn't eaten anything for 24 hours. And I can make it pretty healthy when I do it myself (throw a little whole-wheat flour into the crust, keep the sodium low in the tomato sauce, incorporate some fresh garlic, go easy on the cheese). Hopefully the pizza, some rest, and a little TLC will get him back on his feet.

For tonight, I'll be keeping things simple. Both kids here for dinner, I'm thinking crispy roasted chicken, rice, and a quick tomato gratin. As you can tell, we eat alot of chicken & rice in this house! Variations on a theme, it's all just variations on a theme...ha.

Well, made the pizza for Nathan, and he loved it. He's definitely on the mend. Since I'd messed up the mixer anyhow, I decided to bake some bread for tonight. At first I was thinking challah (or Rockin' Challah as Susie the Metal Jewtheran - Jewish Lutheran - was calling it today; just to use that cool name, I'll post the recipe, below) but I'm a bit low on eggs so just made a nice white loaf instead. I may end up revising the dinner menu, hmmm... As in, I think I'll skip the rice. And since I haven't bought chicken yet, I could skip that too. Soup would be nice with the fresh bread. Too bad no one would eat chili but me, that sounds great... Really the only soup that the whole family will eat is chicken noodle, so I guess that's what I'll shoot for. Fresh bread and chicken noodle soup! With a salad. That's pretty far from chicken & rice with tomato gratin, but so the day goes!

The soup is delicious, but that bread, hmmm...it's looking a little odd in the oven. I bake bread all the time, I'm not sure what I blew, perhaps not quite enough yeast. That's how it looks anyhow. And it looks hilarious! OK, now it's out of the oven, and I sliced the end off, and it tastes yummy, so I guess we'll go with it. Nice texture, chewy and soft interior, good flavor, didn't develop much of a crust though (as you can see) - nice top! Oh well! (If it had tasted like crap I would have baked popovers, which I almost love more than fresh yeast bread anyhow, thus my calm attitude.) Put a little Hope Creamery butter on the table, everyone will think it's fabulous (yes, I bought it again, damn I wish I didn't love it so much...). So, on to a salad, and dinner will be on the table. I have Caesar dressing from last night, and both kids LOVE Caesar, so I know they'll eat their veggies, at least tonight.
1 Comment -- 6 Views
Posted By FreshTartSteph on Nov 29, 2007 at 12:06PM
Brrr! It's the real kind of cold out there now, not the fake stuff, oh no. I've even had to wear a coat (no!) these last few days (I usually get away with a cozy sweater, soft hat, and a big ol' fuzzy scarf). Should serve to put me in the mood for the holidays, but I'm having my usual hard time. It always feels to me like Christmas just ended - uh, didn't my tree just come down? Meh. Oh, I eventually get into it - we'll do our tree this weekend - and then I love it. But it's a harder transition every year. And I want that tree up for less and less time. There is no way, no how I am ever putting up a tree as early as Thanksgiving weekend. Egads, noooo!

In a somewhat more gracious mode, I've been cranking loads of food out of my kitchen. I made and brought appetizer pizzas (tomato/basil, bacon/caramelized onion, olive/feta) and almond coconut bars to Nathan's school yesterday, for their monthly faculty meeting. Hopefully tasted good (!), although I kept thinking that by 3:30 p.m., after a long school day, just about anything would hit the spot, ha. The almond coconut bars were a rather last-minute addition that turned out to be quite delicious - chewy, buttery, and best of all...coconut-ty to the max, rarrr. And super-easy, definitely a new addition to my tasty-yet-make-fast repertoire. (Recipe posted in comments, below.)

Oooh, I also conjured up the most delicious beef soup. I sort of innovated as I walked through Byerly's...grabbed a chuck roast, then fennel, carrots, onions, garlic, mushrooms, rosemary, sage. I browned the roast in some olive oil, took it out of the pot, then sauteed around 1-2 cups each of the chopped veggies, several cloves of minced garlic, and a few sprigs each of rosemary and sage. I put the roast back in the pot, covered it all with water to cover plus one inch, and let it simmer, partially covered at first, and then uncovered for the last hour, for about three hours until the beef was quite tender. I pulled the beef apart (discarded fat) into bite-sized pieces, skimmed fat off the broth, seasoned with lots of salt and pepper, stirred the beef back in the pot, and voila, a hearty, healthy, flavorful beef soup. Good stuff.

And check this out! I got my Romertopf Chicko (pronounced cheeko), but...it's not a Chicko! Close, but not exactly the same. It's just called a "roaster," and it's bigger, which might be nice because you can actually fit vegetables at the base to soak up all the delicious juices (and basting butter, let's be honest here...) I'll need to be returning Lindsay's Chicko to her now, and I'll check in soon on how the, uh, Roaster works (definitely not as cheeky a name as the Chicko, sniff).
2 Comments -- 5 Views
Posted By FreshTartSteph on Aug 3, 2007 at 5:39PM
Here are the veggies and herbs (from my LaFinca veggie share) that I have to play with this weekend:

carrots
fennel

green beans
corn
kale

tomatoes
cucumber
zucchini
summer squash
onions

basil
dill

The carrots and fennel are terrific additions to a packet of Potatoes on the Grill. Summer squash would be nice too. In addition, I love steamed carrots with a little butter and lots of fresh dill and lemon.

The green beans, oh man, I'm so roasting half of them for Roasted Vegetable Panzanella, one of my very favorite meals. The other half I'll save for Spicy Braised Green Beans, which calls for tomato and onion as well. Fried Walleye with some Spicy Braised Green Beans? Ohhh, now that's a summer meal. What night can I pull that off? Might have to wait until Monday...

I didn't feel like boiling a big pot of water last night, just for John and me, so I sliced the kernels off of a couple of ears of corn and sauteed them quickly in a bit of browned butter (adds a lovely, nutty flavor). Salt and pepper, done. Easy and sooo yummy. I think I'll do the same for the kids tomorrow night.

The basil is going to become a small batch of pesto - I like to have a bit on hand for stirring into sauteed corn (stir in a diced tomato with the pesto, so pretty). Or for swirling into Instant Vegetable Soup (an assortment of vegetables grated together, brought to a quick simmer with water, and finished off with a sprinkle of cheese; delicious and very nutritious, and also a good way to use up veggie-share veggies!), which makes a perfect, quick lunch.

The cucumber already became Cucumber-Mint Raita, and I already ate it, ha. Ditto for the zucchini (see below for Zucchini-Tomato Gratin).

The kale, hmmm, there's not much of it so I'll probably just saute it with garlic, then steam it with a small amount of water until it's quite tender. With salt and pepper, and a drizzle of good balsamic, it's pretty hard to beat. Even if no one else in my family thinks so...

Yeah. It's shaping up to be a very colorful, healthy, moderate (no parties, no party food!) weekend. Yay, my butt lurves veggies!
0 Comments -- 11 Views
Posted By FreshTartSteph on Jun 19, 2008 at 7:47PM

Buena sera! And wow, some evening it is here in the Minneapple. We're just back from a family vacation in Italy, Forte dei Marmi in Tuscany (thus my writing absence, if you noticed, which you most likely did not, ha). Nathan, John, and I left last Wednesday, with John's parents and brother's family, got back (very) late last night. I can't believe I'm saying this, but at least for tonight, the weather is much lovelier here in Minnesota than in...Tuscany! Woo hoo! This, right now, is my perfect night. Warm, dry, fragrant - everyone's outside, desperate for summer to begin. Es bueno.

Too bad I'm so jet lagged, it's pretty disappointing. I've always had big plans to "travel" - but in reality, it completely wipes me out, screws up my digestion, and makes me feel old and tired. That said...

...I (of course) had a great time! Forte dei Marmi is on the coast of Tuscany, so seafood and fish are menu staples. I cashed in, passing on the pastas and risottos (other than stealing bites from my son!) and enjoyed lovely fresh vegetables and fish dishes - moderation made easy, nice. Which is the whole vibe in Italy anyhow, and most of Europe for that matter. Particular favorites included:

  • Warm lobster with raw shaved carrots and fennel in a pool of extra-virgin olive oil
  • Whole-roasted branzino (Mediterranean sea bass), served with roasted potatoes and zucchini
  • Farro soup, thick with clams, calamari, and shrimp
  • Salad "imperiale" with mache, cherry tomatoes, and warm langoustines (otherwise known as Norway lobsters or scampi; similar to shrimp or crayfish)
  • Focaccina (grilled, salted pizza crust) sandwiches with rocket (arugula), shaved bresaola, and soft cheese
  • Antipasti at the bar of our hotel (Grand Hotel Imperiale): salamis, Parm with honey, pizza fritta (fried bread dough with salt; Nathan's favorite)


I confess that after a 20-hour trip home (bad weather in New York seriously delayed the second leg of our trip), I was too tired to make dinner tonight. So John and I set out for an early meal at Alma - the perfect destination for extending our fresh-food Italian reverie for just a few more hours. I opened with a beautifully composed little salad of smoked whitefish, arugula, potatoes, and spicy mustard; followed by a cold entree of farro, shrimp, and chickpeas. With a Turley Zin, and a nice piece of sheep's milk cheese to finish (I love that Alma will let you buy one slice of cheese for dessert, every restaurant should do the same), I am a goner, my friends. More tomorrow.

0 Comments -- 13 Views
Posted By FreshTartSteph on Dec 27, 2006 at 8:52PM
Christmas Day at the farm was perfect. Lovely drive, beautiful setting, great hosts (my aunt Mary and uncle Bruce) and guests (aunt Marge, uncle Jim, cousins Kelly, Kim, and Craig). And the KILL meal - salad with berries and almonds, roast prime rib with pan juices, mashed potatoes with sour cream (oh yeah, they're as incredible as they sound; recipe posted in comments, below), Harvard beets, roasted vegetables, challah, and Marge's pumpkin cheesecake with caramel sauce. After opening presents, we played a boys-vs-girls game of Taboo (girls kicked butt, of course), and then John and I drove home, enjoying the festive small town Christmas lights and remembering how incredibly bright the stars are when you get out of the city. Beautiful!

And now, oh ho ho is it time for the holidays to go! At least the over-eating part, ack. DONE! So long coffee cakes and cheeses and potatoes and steaks and breads and wines andcookies. Had you all! Enjoyed every bite and sip! But am also enjoying my return to salads and veggies and fruits and soups and teas and fish and nuts, aka Normal Eating. Like last night, when I pulled leftover simple tomato-garlic soup out of the freezer, stirred in chipotle chili powder, canned black beans, and a few diced tender turkey meatballs. NICE! And filling and healthy too.

Or like tonight - sauteed chicken, big salad, a mug of hot tea for dessert, and a family game night including rounds of Blokus and Scrabble. It's still vacation for the kids, but feels good to get back a bit of our usual groove, too.

Big plans for the New Year? Not here, a quiet night is in order which is damn fine with me! We're thinking perhaps Indian takeout, requisite glass of bubbly, more board games, and BED! After all the December celebrating, and my 40th in mere weeks, a low-key New Year's Eve breather sounds positively lovely.
6 Comments -- 3 Views
Posted By FreshTartSteph on Jun 27, 2006 at 9:03AM
Happy Birthday Etta!

My sister Etta is 22 today, celebrating not in NYC but in Buenos Aires. I'm not sure what her specific party plans are, but I know she'll be eating very well! She's staying for five weeks with friends of her aunt Anne, the Deane family, and they are caterers! How seriously perfect! Here are excerpts from her recent food update:

...am going to gain 10 pounds because the food is so good. They eat veal cutlets like it ain't no thang. Hmm fried meat...who knew? I have had no bacon but did have something called ¨matahombre,¨ which directly translates to ¨kill hunger.¨ It is a strip of fat from the pig's back that is served sort of like bacon. It came at the end of a dinner. Darn good. Will put meat on your bones! Mrs. Deane chases me with cheese puffs and something like Marge´s bars around the catering office. There is at least a lot of salad, arugula mixed with regular lettuce - a perfect balance in my mind, tomatoes, and whatever else you want. (And fresh parmesan.) Frickin´ polenta, veal ravioli, cheese ravioli with spinach and beef on the outside, tenderloin, red chilean salmon, vegetable soup, chicken. I believe thin slices of breast sauteed in oil. Breakfast is very small, tea and cereal. Tea time snacks in this house are these 2 x 4-inch rice crackers that we toast and then put on cream cheese (light) as well as sprinkle some sesame seeds over. So good. Apparently the seeds are good for digestion? After lunch I am usually offered a "lagrima" which directly translated means "tear drop" but is actually warm milk with a drop of coffee...

Oh my goodness, she goes on from there about all the fabulousness, it made me starving when I read it last night - after dinner - and starving again this morning - after breakfast. Now that is MY kind of trip, ha. And hers too. This family loves good food, thank god. I laughed out loud about the fried veal - while Etta has been eating veal in Argentina, I was doing the same in NYC and here - I say three times in one week qualifies as like it ain't no thang! The best way of all - ah, sweet abandon. Not moderate, but that's OK...in moderation. And I'm frying veal yet again this weekend, for John and my brother-in-law Tom... Great stomachs crave alike (!?)

Come lunchtime, I'll most definitely be eyeing leftover eggplant crisps. And I'm pondering a small toasted sandwich comprised of thin slices of baguette, a smear of the spicy tomato sauce from last night, and a slice of fresh mozzarella. If it's as tasty as I imagine, it may reappear this weekend as an appetizer. Stay tuned...

Well, the little sandwich, pictured, was two bites of crispy, spicy, cheesy delish. Perhaps I'll work it into a tapas-sort of dinner for this weekend, it would fit quite nicely. Hmmm...I'll think about that a bit. Crispy potatoes with tuna. Bits of steak with cabreles cheese. Skewers of garlicky shrimps. Roasted vegetables. A frittata. Lots of options, that could be fun. Then again, I may completely run out of steam/time and we'll just have the little sandwiches for a quick lunch. Again, stay tuned...(oooh, all this drama!)

I made a few more little sandwiches for John for dinner, with some broccoli soup (I don't even need to post a recipe, literally, its chopped broccoli, shallots, and garlic, cooked in some olive oil for a few minutes, then simmered until tender in chicken broth to cover, pureed in a blender with some cream, seasoned with salt and pepper to taste, good to go. Mmm...) Then Nathan and John shot some baskets outside, and now it's time to get ready for bed. 'Night!
0 Comments -- 6 Views

Tortilla Soup

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Mar 7, 2011 at 8:38AM

tortilla soup

Spring may be right around the corner, but I'm freezing right now.  Brrr!  I keep going out at night without stockings on, dying to wear something other than boots, hoping that because it's now March, 20 degrees will feel more like 50 degrees.

Not that 50 degrees is warm enough to go stockingless either, but if you're from 'round these parts, you know how it goes.  When you ride a +100-degree annual temperature swing, it seems perfectly logical to skip stockings while wearing a wool coat and giant scarf.

At least it does to me.

It's all about bridging the seasons, mixing things up.  Given hot comfort with bright, fresh flavors, tortilla soup fits my fickle mood.  Make it as spicy as you like, then layer in the good stuff - cheese, avocado slices, a squeeze of lime, and of course crunchy tortillas.

It takes a bit longer to start from scratch, but it's so worth it for the rich chicken flavor.  You could definitely do this soup in a crockpot of you're so inclined.  The final puree gives the soup body and thickness without adding flour or masa.

Tortilla Soup
Serves 8

Soup
1 broiler/fryer chicken (2-3 lbs.)
8 c. chicken broth
3 dried guajillo chiles, stems removed, cut into large pieces (guajillos are mild dried chiles, substitute others as you like or add more or less to taste)
1 carrot, halved
1 medium onion, quartered
3 cloves garlic, smashed and peeled
1 Tbsp. dried oregano
1 Tbsp. ground cumin
1 14-oz. can chopped, fire-roasted tomatoes

Garnishes
sliced avocados
shredded jack cheese
chopped fresh cilantro
wedges of fresh lime
corn tortilla chips

Place chicken in a large Dutch oven, add the remaining soup ingredients, set over high heat, and bring to a boil.  Turn heat to very low, so that broth barely bubbles. Simmer for 2-3 hours, uncovered, or until chicken is falling-apart tender.

Remove chicken from broth and set on a cutting board to cool.  Skim fat and residue from the broth.  Using an immersion blender, or a stand blender in small batches, puree the soup and return to the pot.

Remove and discard chicken skin, then remove chicken meat from the bones and cut into bite-size pieces.  Add chicken to the pot.  Season soup to taste with salt and pepper.  Serve with garnishes.

Tagged with: Chicken, soups, GLUTEN-FREE
7 Comments -- 638 Views
Posted By FreshTartSteph on Sep 29, 2006 at 1:10PM
This squash, delicata, was new to me in my CSA veggie share last week. I had to look it up - from whatscookingamerica.net:

Delicata squash is also called sweet potato, peanut squash, and bohemian squash. This is one of the tastier winter squashes, with creamy pulp that tastes a bit like sweet potatoes. Size may range from 5 to 10 inches in length. The squash can be baked or steamed. The skin is also edible.

The delicata squash is actually an heirloom variety, a fairly recent reentry into the culinary world. It was originally introduced by the Peter Henderson Company of New York City in 1894, and was popular through the 1920s. Then it fell into obscurity for about seventy-five years, possibly because of its thinner, more tender skin, which isn't suited to transportation over thousands of miles and storage over months.

It's absolutely delicious! I love squash, to me it's a treat worthy of dessert status, so I tend to save it for the end of a meal. I baked this one, cut side down, until tender, then pureed it with a bit of butter and brown sugar (and topped it with a drizzle of maple syrup and a few chopped walnuts to make a pretty pic). My neighbor Lindsay was going to puree it with granny-smith apple to make a lovely-sounding soup - it's a good soup squash, very creamy and smooth. If you see it at the store, definitely give it a try.

And Happy Birthday to my sister-in-law Valerie!!!

Oooh, I just picked up my veggies for this week. Lookin' good, baby! I decided to cook several different things right now so that I'll have healthy, tasty bites all weekend. There's a big bunch of flat-leaf parsley so I'm soaking bulgur wheat for tabbouleh salad (I still have cukes, onions, and tomatoes from past weeks). Then I cut up the turnips, rutabaga, carrots, and a few potatoes, threw them into a pot of boiling water with a couple of cloves of garlic, to turn into a simple root vegetable puree. If I have a hankering for soup, I could thin some of the puree with broth and a splash of cream, float a crouton on top, and call it lunch. And last, I'm roasting an eggplant, halved, with some garlic and onion. When it's all tender I'll mash it together, add more of that flat-leaf parsley, olive oil, and some lemon juice, and have myself a nice spread for toasted pita.

Why the picture of my nephew Cooper being smooched by his mommy, my sister Stacey? Becauses it's so damn CUTE! Have a good weekend!
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Fresh. Tart. Fresh Tart!

stephanie meyer fresh tart

 

I’m Stephanie Meyer. If you're looking for fresh, delicious food to share with those you love - welcome! In addition to the recipes you'll find here, I post Tuesday recipes at TC Taste/Minnesota Monthly magazine with a focus on local, seasonal ingredients. I also cook and take photos for Andrew Zimmern's Kitchen Adventures/Food & Wine magazine, post gluten-free recipes at Stuffed Pepper, cook with food photographer Susan Powers for Shooting the Kitchen, and organize the Minnesota Food Bloggers. Let’s eat!

 

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