Media Mentions & Being Thankful

It has been a good couple of months for Eat.LiveBlog and Boston Brunchers! I have been lucky enough to have been included in several food related articles!

  • Foodies of New England Magazine (pg 88) - In the Fall 2012 edition, Foodies of New England Magazine wrote an extremeley flattering article on me and the Boston Brunchers. Despite the mis-spelling of my name (only once, with a million apologies from the author), I could not  be more excited about being included in this beautiful magazine. If you are in New England, I highly suggest trying to pick up a hard copy.
  • Boston.com – I love the writers over at Boston.com. Since I started the Boston Brunchers they have been behind me and helpful. So it was my pleasure to help out with their Thanksgiving Recipes by Boston Bloggers recipe roundup. Check out my Fall Veggie Hash which makes an appearance on side 12.
  • Boston Innovation – Nothing geeks me more than when I am considered “expert” enough to offer insight for reporters and journalists. So when Lisa, from Boston Innovation, contacted me to ask for my views on “Party Brunches” coming to Boston, I was happy to share my thoughts!

I haven’t written any “why I’m thankful” posts yet for November…and I am not sure I will, even thought there are a plethora of things I am thankful for. But I am incrediby thankful for this blog, and for the Boston Brunchers. Since I left marketing and owning  my own agency, these 2 outlets have really been an amazing outlet for my creativity. Never, in a million years, did I think there would be the excitement of being included in amazing journalistic outlets such as those I have had the honor of working with in the past 3 years. Not only am I thankful, I am also humbled.

While I am at it, I would be remiss if I did not mention how thankful I am for those of you reading this right now. For those of you who know me in person, you know that writing and food are 2 things I have been passionate about since, pretty much, birth. Thank you for indulging me as I share those passions with you.

With that, my friends,  I wish you a very Happy Thanksgiving! I hope you get to spend it with special people and food that makes you happy!

Next week I will be starting a new series: “Something Different Holiday Gift Guide”! Stay tuned!

Delicious Thanksgiving Side Recipes: Fall Vegetable Hash & Mashed Potatoes w/ Gravy

Thank you to Good to Know & Unilever Spreads for sponsoring this post. Find delicious recipes and learn more about Unilever spreads by visiting www.itisgoodtoknow.com. I was selected for this opportunity as a member of Clever Girls Collective.

I am pretty sure Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday to cook for. When I am planning what to make for Turkey Day (in addition to turkey, of course) I want to make something that tastes like home…if that makes sense. But I also want to make something that stands out from the rest of the childhood favorites on the table.Ingredients for Veggie Hash side dish for Thanksgiving

If your family meal is anything like ours, the chances are it is extremely carb heavy. So, I decided to create a veggie dish that would be subtle enough to blend in with the rest of the meal, but different enough that everyone will want the recipe. If I do say so myself… I nailed it with this Fall Veggie Hash. While it still has the requisite carbs, it tastes fresh and light…and has a sprinkling of green to make you feel better!Homemade Mashed Potatoes

And no Thanksgiving is complete without mashed potatoes and gravy! I make these mashed potatoes quite often at home, but only make the gravy when the occasion calls for it. If you are using canned gravy…STOP! Making your own is far too easy and far too delicious. There is a nasty rumor going around that I may have eaten quite a bit of this gravy with a spoon…don’t judge me…Homemade Gravy for Thanksgivinig using I Can't Believe It's Not Butter

A note about using spreads in place of butter: A little fact about my kitchen. I NEVER have real butter in my kitchen. For as long as I can remember, I have always had a spread in my fridge in place of butter. I cook with them, bake with them, I do everything that calls for butter with them. More often than not, the spread in my fridge is I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter Light. So when the opportunity came to write about cooking with a spread, I was happy to do it. I think it is such an easy, painless way to cook just a little bit healthier.

Fall Vegetable Hash Recipe

Makes 4 servings

Ingredients

  • Optional: 3 strips of thick cut bacon (diced)
  • 2 Tbsp I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter (I use the light version)
  • 6 brussel sprouts (washed and diced)
  • 1/2 large Idaho potato (washed and diced into small squares, skin still on)
  • 1/2 large sweet potato (washed, peeled and diced into small squares)
  • 1/2 small onion (peeled and diced)
  • 1/4 cup chicken or vegetable broth
  • Optional: 4 – 10 dashes of hot sauce (my favorite is Sylvia’s)

Directions:

  1. Heat up a large skillet over medium-high heat
  2. Add bacon and cook until all pieces are crispy (if you are using it. If not, skip to step 5)
  3. Using a slotted spoon, remove bacon from the pan to a plate lined with paper towels. Set bacon aside
  4. Drain oil from pan, but do not clean the pan
  5. Return the pan to the heat and add 1 Tbsp of the I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter and melt
  6. Add brussel sprouts, both potatoes, onion, broth and half the hot sauce (if you are using it)
  7. Stir well and cover
  8. Cook over medium-high heat with the lid on for 5 minutes, stir, add remaining tablespoon of I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter and cover again with lid. Cook, covered, for an additional 5 minutes.
  9. Remove lid and stir well.
  10. Salt and pepper to taste. Add the remaining hot sauce if desired. Add the cooked bacon if using.
  11. Turn heat up to high and cook, stirring frequently, until hash begins to brown
  12. Enjoy alongside your Thanksgiving meal!

Mashed Potatoes Recipe

Makes 4 servings

Ingredients

  • 2 large Idaho Potatoes (peeled and cut in eighths)
  • Water
  • 2 Tbsp I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter (I use light)
  • 2 Tbsp sour cream (I use light)
  • 1/4 cup milk
  • Salt & pepper to taste

Directions

  1. Place potatoes in a large pot and add water to 1 inch above the potatoes and add Adobo to the water
  2. Place pot over high heat
  3. Once the water begins to boil, cook until a fork can easily be inserted all the way through the potatoes (about 15 minutes)
  4. When potatoes are cooked, drain them of all water and return the potatoes to the pot
  5. Add I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter, sour cream and milk
  6. Mix with a hand mixer until potatoes are your desired consistency. If you would like them a little creamier, add a dash more milk and a dash more I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter
  7. Add salt and pepper to taste, and mix in seasoning

Poultry Gravy Recipe

Makes 1 cup

Ingredients

  • 2 Tbsp I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter (I use Light)
  • 2 Tbsp All purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup of drippings from cooking a turkey or chicken
  • 3/4 cup chicken or turkey broth

Directions

  1. In a small pot, melt I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter over medium-low heat
  2. Just before it is completely melted, add flour and stir continuously until the mixture forms a smooth ball
  3. Mix together pan drippings and broth
  4. Pour 1/8 of the mixture into the pot with the flour mixture and stir well until all lumps are gone
  5. Repeat the above step until you have the desired consistency of your gravy (it is going to thicken a tad more from the heat)
  6. Continue to cook over medium-low heat, stirring constantly for 2 minutes
  7. Serve over your mashed potatoes, turkey, stuffing…over straight from the spoon….

Thank you to Good to Know & Unilever Spreads for being a sponsor. I was selected for this opportunity as a member of Clever Girls Collective. All opinions expressed here are my own.

Slowcooker Thanksgiving Dinner: Its not just for Thanksgiving anymore!

I subscribe to the school that asks the question, why? Why do we only indulge in one of the best meals available once per year. It makes no sense friends. None at all.

Well I am here to tell you we don’t have to stand for this any longer! Stuffing, cranberries, poultry….we can have them any night of the week! And thanks to this recipe, you can have them in your crockpot with pretty much no fuss at all!

I found the base of this recipe on Allrecipes.com, which I love. The reviews weren’t great, but I saw potential in this recipe….and I was really craving stuffing. So, to work I went!

I will remind you that I have an amazing, crockpot thanks to West Bend, which I am sure played a part in this recipe coming out perfectly. I will also warn you to NOT over cook this meal, it will stick to your crockpot and possibly destroy it. However, if you cook this recipe on low for 4 hours only, what you will get is a delicious, comforting, fabulous dinner! Something in this recipe causes the chicken to be extra flavorful and moist, and honestly, addicting!

What is your favorite holiday recipe to pull out any time of the year?

Slowcooker Thanksgiving Dinner

Ingredients

  • 2 split, bone-in chicken breasts
  • 1/2 tsp Goya Adobo or poultry seasoning
  • 1/4 tsp thyme
  • 10 oz cubed stuffing (I used Pepperidge Farm Country Style stuffing – note: NOT the whole bag)
  • 14 oz of whole cranberry sauce (canned or fresh)
  • 14 oz Cream of Chicken soup (I used the 98% fat free)
  • 1/2 cup diced celery
  • 1/2 cup diced vidalia onions
  • 1 cup water

Directions:

  • Place the chicken breast, skin side up, in the bottom of your slowcooker
  • Sprinkle the chicken with poultry seasoning and thyme
  • In a large bowl, combine stuffing, soup, cranberry sauce, onions and celery
  • Mix together well
  • Pour stuffing mixture over the chicken, making sure it is evenly covered
  • Pour water over the top
  • Cover and cook in your slowcooker, on low for 4 hours
  • You may turn the cooker to warm after that to keep it warm
  • Enjoy!


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Happy Thanksgiving!

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I wish you, your family and friends a magical Thanksgiving! I am thankful for your support of Eat.Live.Blog and for the amazing foodie comminity I have found in you all! Enjoy the day and all the delicious surprises it brings!

Cranberries Three Ways!

I love this time of the year, what is better than a holiday that pretty much can lay claim to several foods. One of my favorite of these exclusive foods is the fabulous cranberry!

When I moved to New England 5 years ago, I thought I had waved goodbye to my favorite cranberry concoction, raw cranberry orange relish. But 2 years ago I could take it no more…I would become the bearer of all things cranberry!

This year I took it a step further, producing not only the relish, but a whole cranberry sauce and an amazing Cape Code Cranberry Tart that I can thank my friend Robin of http://www.dovesandfigs.com for! The tart was my biggest success, since you all know that I do NOT bake! You can view the recipe on Robin’s blog, and trust me, if I can do it, ANYone can! As an added bonus, I made extra candied cranberries from this recipe to put on top of my mini baked bries!

Cranberries make me happy, and I think I will have to take this joy with me into other seasons of the year…fall shouldn’t get all the fun!

Raw Cranberry-Orange Relish

Ingredients:

  • 1 lb fresh cranberries
  • 1 cup of sugar
  • 1.5 Navel oranges (or other de-seeded variety) cut into eighths with the peel still on. – Yes, the peel goes into the relish, trust me!

Directions:

  • Place all 3 ingredients into a food processor and pulse until finely blended
  • Try to keep yourself from eating the entire batch in one sitting,

Whole Cranberry Sauce

Ingredients

  • 12 oz fresh cranberries
  • 1 cup of sugar
  • 1 cup of water

Directions:

  • Bring water and sugar to a boil in a stainless steel pot
  • Add cranberries and return to a boil
  • Reduce heat to a simmer and allow to slowly boil for 10 -12 minutes
  • Place a metal strainer over a serving bowl and drain the sauce from the cranberries
  • Scoop a couple of the remaining cranberries into the liquid
  • Use a metal spoon to press the remaining cranberries through the strainer.
  • If you want, you may put more of the pulp into the liquid instead of pressing it all through the strainer.
  • Cover the bowl and allow to cool completely at room temperature.
  • Refrigerate until ready to serve.
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