Tips

Pantry Essentials

Pantry Essentials

Pantry Essentials

It happens, we all get busy and all of a sudden we need food and need it fast. Here is how to keep from running out of fast food. Stay in by having a few of these Pantry Essentials on hand for simple and creative snacks anytime. I often make my own pizza crusts and keep them frozen and ready for use but sometimes you just need a quick snack, appetizer or lunch. I always have some type of tortilla shells yet pita bread, naan, flat bread, even English muffins or bagels will work too. Basically you are looking for a flat bread-type items to serve as a base, then add a sauce a variety of toppings and in 15 min or less you have food on the table. Here is a basic guide.

Base (pick one)    

  • tortilla shells
  • pita bread
  • naan
  • flat bread
  • English muffins
  • bagels

Spread Base with Sauce (pick one)

  • Marinara
  • Blue cheese dressing
  • Buffalo sauce
  • Herbed cream cheese
  • Ranch dressing
  • Italian dressing
  • BBQ Sauce

Add a Topping or two (pick 1-3)

  • Deli meats
  • Pepperoni
  • Chicken
  • Tomatoes
  • Cheese
  • Olives
  • Herbs
  • Artichoke Hearts
  • Sausage
  • Grilled Vegetable
  • Canned Beans
  • Leftovers

* be creative! Many items are shelf-stable. Keep a few of your favorites on hand and you will never be hungry again!

Place under the broiler for 3-5 minutes and you are set with hot and tasty snacks. Slice and serve like pizza or fold in half like sandwiches.

Healthy Snacks: Coconut Almond Lime Bites

Healthy Snacks: Coconut Almond Lime Bites

Mommy and baby party day

(Mommy and baby party day)

This past week Alexander and I hosted our first party since he was born. He is now 4 moths old and I have learned a lot about healthy eating with babies especially since making meals one-handed is a skill I have not yet mastered. I learned that with a baby, the best meals are ones that are good at room temperature or cold, they can be eaten one-handed without the need to be cut, preferably no utensils at all.

My menu for this party was filled with healthy snacks for my new mommy friends. After having Alexander I notice I am hungry all the time and constantly looking for simple healthy snacks that I can grab easily or take on the go. These Coconut Almond Lime Bites are a perfect protein-packed healthy snack for anyone with a busy lifestyle.

Healthy Snacks: Coconut Almond Lime Bites

Looking for power-packed healthy snacks that taste great? Try these Coconut Lime Almond Bites to eat well on the go.

Healthy Snacks: Coconut Almond Lime Bites

Coconut Almond Lime Bites

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Start to Finish: 45 minutes

Makes 20-24 Bites

These coconut lime almond bites are great for an on-the-go snack that will keep you energized.

Ingredients

  • 1 1/4 cup old-fashioned oats
  • 2/3 cup unsweetened coconut flakes, plus additional for rolling
  • 1/3 cup finely chopped unsalted almonds
  • 1/3 cup white chocolate chips
  • 1/2 cup almond butter
  • 3 tablespoons honey
  • 1 tablespoon fresh squeezed lime juice
  • Zest from 1 lime
  • ¼ teaspoon salt

In a medium bowl, combine ingredients and mix well. Cover and refrigerate for 30 minutes. Remove from refrigerator and roll into 1-inch balls. Roll balls in additional coconut flakes to cover. Store covered in refrigerator.

How to Cut a Chicken

You can do this!

Don’t be afraid to buy a whole bird. Once you learn how easy it is to cut up a whole chicken on your own you will love saving extra money and creating delicious healthy meals. On average a whole chicken will cost about $1.45 per pound while boneless breasts cost about $3.45 per pound. That’s a $2 per pound savings! When you know simple ways to use all the parts of a chicken you can create a variety of tasty meals and have homemade chicken broth as an added FREE Bonus.

Here is a simple guide to How to Cut a Whole Chicken. Want to learn how to do this in person? Join me at one of the upcoming classes.

(my husband Joey and his first attempt at cutting a chicken)

(my husband Joey and his first attempt at “cutting” a chicken)

Having a baby at home definitely changes how we do mealtime at our house. Even though it looks a little different, we are still committed to creating consistent family mealtime to experience all the benefits. We rely a lot on make-ahead meals. Also my husband Joey has been helping with a little bit of cooking, which has led to some interesting experiences like me realizing he has never cut up a whole chicken before. As I was holding the baby and guiding him he said, “I don’t need a knife” as he ripped the meat from the bones with his hands. Yes, his technique did work but there are other ways to approach a chicken then ripping it’s joints apart like a caveman.

I think learning how to cut up a chicken is one of the most essential skills as it can also save you a lot of money while producing a variety of flavorful meals, even putting the bones to use to make homemade chicken broth. Don’t be scared: cutting up a chicken is easier than you think! It takes a little practice but once you understand how to do it and find the joints it’s the same process every time. The key is not to force it. When you find the joint, the knife will easily cut through; if it is difficult – you are hitting bone and need to move the knife slightly to find the sweet spot. Check here for simple instruction on how to cut a chicken. For more help or to learn this skill hands-on join one of our classes.

How to Cut a Chicken

  1. Remove the Wings:

Lay the bird on its back. Wiggle a wing to determine where the joint attaches to the breast. To separate the wing from the breast, use a sharp knife. Cut through the joint where it meets the breast. Repeat with the other wing.

Remove the Wings

  1. Remove the Legs:

Pull a leg away from the body cutting through the skin to see where it attaches. To remove the whole leg, feel where the join is, you may want to pop it forward for easy access. Cut through the joint between the thigh and the breast. Repeat with the other leg.

Remove the LegsRemove the Legs2

  1. Divide the Leg:

To get a drumstick and a thigh, place each led skin-side down. Flex and feel to see where the ball joint between the drumstick and the thigh is located. Look for the thin line of fat that is perpendicular to the body. Cut through the line of fat to separate the thigh and the drumstick, wiggling the joint as needed to determine where it is and repeat with the other leg.

Divide the Leg

  1. Remove the Breasts:

Using your sharp knife starting at the top of the neck cut along the side of the breastbone. Carefully trim the meat away from the bone following the natural curve of the rib cage. For more stability use kitchen shears to cut through the rib cage first making a more flat surface to work with. Repeat with the other side. (The wishbone is located near the top of the neck at the thick part of the breast. Remove this piece to prevent the choking hazard. Save bones to make chicken stock.

Remove the BreastsRemove the Breasts2

 

Family Dinner: How to Host a Meaningful Meal

Family Dinner, How to Host a Meaningful Meal

Family Dinner: How to Host a Meaningful Meal

Research shows that eating meals together increases the quality of relationships, improves communication, saves money, leads to healthier habits and several other benefits of a family dinner. A family meal does not have to be dinner or just include family. Here are some ways to get started hosting your meaningful family mealtime.

Who: Gather family and/or close friends. Sometime role models come best from people outside the family. Don’t limit your family meal. Invite close friends, relatives even neighbors or a friend of the children over to help foster relationships.

What: Consume food in a meaningful, deliberate way, not just eating as quickly as you can to rush to the next activity, but eating while fully being present with others. Take time to inquire about each other’s days. Start conversation with open-ended positive questions. Try, what was good about your day? What fun thing did you learn today? What are you looking forward to tomorrow? Keeping the conversation upbeat and positive makes this an activity to look forward to. Keep tough family matters and discipline for a later time. Turn off your devices to limit distraction and add to a sense of togetherness. I often suggest if a person is that important to chat with over mealtime next time invite them to the meal.

Why: Eating a meal together is a ritual that foster healthy relationships. See the 8 Benefits of sharing a family meal. Enjoy this time to pause from the daily activity and connect with loved ones. Generally, people who participate in family or group mealtimes are healthier and happier than those who eat alone.

Where: A meal can take place anywhere. Don’t let the idea of it looking a certain way stop you from taking part in the meal. Typically, it would take place in a home at a designated table where participants are all sitting together and distractions can be limited. This could also take place at a park sitting outside or even at a restaurant, as long as the participants are engaged with each other and not distracted by other events or devices.

When: Rarely does a family sit together for every meal. Most people think of meal time as the evening meal. You should know that it can look different and family or group meals can take place at breakfast and lunch as well. Set a goal to eat as a family 3-5 times per week and try getting lunch with a group of friends 1 time per week rather than eating alone. Notice the effect it has on your mood and relationships.

How: Make a commitment to start small and value your health and relationships. Identify what days and times work best for everyone’s schedules, knowing that everyone may have to give a little to make this work, and see the benefits. Be clear about what times are family mealtimes, and when to be home. Don’t force it, but invite others to participate. Make it clear that for the mealtime, devices are not welcome and conversation is. Invite others to participate in preparing food, setting the table, cleaning up and planning meals. When each person has a role to play and can contribute, it is more enjoyable for everybody and less work for you.

Remember that the food itself is less important than the act of joining people together. It is more about connection rather than the food. The food can be as simple as sandwiches, pizza or leftovers, a new recipe or a family favorite; even take-out counts. Be a good role model, set examples for manners and how to treat others. Practice eating slowly to take part in conversation, help digestion and simply enjoy the meal. Simple things like setting the table, lighting a candle or giving thanks all add to the ritual of making the meal an event, a dedicated time to relax and enjoy togetherness while everything else can wait for a few moments.

Who’s coming to dinner: The party invitation

8 Benefits of a Family Meal

With the New Year it never fails to hear people making resolutions for better health, saving money and finding love or improving relationships. You want to know the one simple magic act that can do all three? Something that can improve the quality of your daily life, increase the chances of success for your children, better your health and quality of relationships. It is something as simple and inexpensive and it’s well within the reach of everyone’s abilities, it’s a family meal.

If you have been following me for a while, you know that to me family meal is an act of dining together to creating connection and memories. This is one of the most important things to me. With a 3-month-old in the house, I have to be honest: our family meals look a lot different than they used to. I am not cooking quite as much but relying on previously made freezer meals and my husband Joey has been helping out which is a whole new cooking experience in it’s self. Even with the new challenges it is still important to me that we create a family mealtime. There are so many benefits of a family meal that it is worth the small amount of effort for the long-term benefits. I know currently my son does not know or care that we have family meals but it is never too early to start the practice and create a routine to take part in the benefits of a family meal.

8 Benefits of a Family Meal

  1. Saving Money

Preparing meals at home costs less. You will spend less money and get higher quality food when eating at home. It costs about $25 for a family of four to buy a meal at a typical fast food restaurant. Averaging just two trips per week totals $50; continuing the pattern each week over the course of a full year comes to $2600.

A daily fast food lunch runs at least $5; in a typical five day workweek, that’s $25. Over the course of a year, $1300. Just for lunch. Just for one person.

  1. Better Manners

Coming together provides adults a chance to set good examples and teach about social skills, table manners and essential life skills like being kind to others, how to have basic polite conversation and setting and clearing the table.

  1. Healthy Communication

Sharing a meal together helps foster healthy communication studies show that teens who share in a family meal are less likely to be depressed and more likely to be motivated to learn.

  1. Healthy Habits

Eating meals together means you are more likely to eat healthier foods. Families that eat together are less likely to dine out consuming less fried food and sugar-filled beverages and are more likely to consume fruits, vegetables and other healthy foods during dinnertime (Marino & Butkus, n.d.). Some researchers found that eating meals together reduces the risk for being overweight (Forthun, 2008a; FY1059). You can also use this time to introduce basic cooking skills. See benefits of cooking with children.

  1. Healthier Children

Research shows that children who have regular meals with their parents do better in every way: they tend to have better grades, are more motivated in school, and foster healthier relationships. They are 42 percent less likely to drink, 50 percent less likely to smoke and 66 percent less likely to smoke marijuana. Children and youth who do not eat family meals together are also more likely to report feeling depressed or having trouble at school. (CASA, 2011).

  1. Stronger Relationships

Sharing a meal together provides time and space to share about your day, inquire about actives, feelings and daily events fostering healthy communication and stronger family bonds.

  1. Weigh Less

You are more likely to weigh less if you eat at home. USDA researchers have found a positive association with patterns of eating out and body weight due to the higher calorie count and poorer nutritional quality of away-from-home meals and snacks.

  1. Family Togetherness and Well-being

Creating a family mealtime strengthens the family bonds, for young children it helps create a sense of security and belonging. Eating together allows a space to share in ethnic and cultural identity sharing in traditions. A study from Emory University found that children who knew a lot about their family history, through family meals and other interactions, had a closer relationship to family members, higher self-esteem, and a greater sense of control over their own lives (Duke, Fivush, Lazarus, & Bohanek, 2003).

Family mealtime can look many different ways and does not have to mean dinner. If weekend lunches or breakfast work better for your schedule take advantage of those times. They key is to gather people together and sit down to a meal together without distractions. Stay in touch next week: I will share tips on gathering the family together and How to Host a Meaningful meal.

References

Duke, M.P., Fivush, R., Lazarus, A., & Bohanek, J. (2003). Of ketchup and kin: Dinntertime conversations as a major source of family knowledge, family adjustment, and family resilience (Working Paper #26). Retrieved July 25, 2008, from http://www.marial.emory.edu/research/

Forthun, L.F. (2008a). Family nutrition: Parenting and family life. Gainesville, FL: Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Publication number: FCS8869.

Marino, M., & Butkus, Sue (n.d.). Background: Research on family meals. [22 March 2013].

The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) (2011, Sept.). The importance of family dinners VII. Retrieved December 22, 2011

USDA Food Away From Home, October 29, 2014