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Melissa-profile This is more than just a recipe blog. I am not a chef. I am a mom of four children, one of whom has an autoimmune disease, wife of a Crossfit junkie, and healthy food lover. I love learning about and cooking new, healthy and delicious food. This is simply me sharing the ways I take care of my family by being aware and mindful of the food I feed them and as a result making lots of Gluten Free & Paleo Recipes by Melissa.

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Creamy Saffron Vegetable Soup

Safron Soup

I first posted this soup almost a year ago and after making it for dinner recently I knew I had to give it the spot light again.  This soup is light yet so savory.  And here’s my tricky little secret…it’s creamy without using any cream.  So good for you and good tasting!
  

1 tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
1 yellow onion, diced
2 clove garlic, minced
2 celery ribs, chopped
4-5 cups chicken stock (however thick you want it)
2 bay leafs
1 tsp turmeric
1 pinch saffron threads, about a quarter of a teaspoon
2 carrots, chopped
2 red potatoes, cubed
1 can great northern beans, pureed
1 small yellow crookneck squash, sliced
chopped parsley
Heat olive oil in pot.  Add onion, garlic and celery.  Saute until onions are caramelized then pour in your chicken stock, bay leafs, turmeric, carrots and potatoes.  Bring to a low boil and let cook for about 5 minutes while you puree the beans (you may need to add some of the stock from your pot into the beans in the food processor) Mix pureed beans in until well blended.  Add squash and simmer for another 5-10 minutes.  Remove bay leaves and top with fresh parsley.
*I’ll just say if up front, saffron is the most expensive spice in the world, about $800 a pound!  Don’t worry you don’t need near that much.  You’ll probably pay about $13 for a packet of these tiny red threads, but the flavor and benefits may make it worth it. 
  • The active components present in saffron have many therapeutic applications in many traditional medicines since long time ago as anti-spasmodic, carminative, diaphoretic.
  • Research studies have shown that, safranal, a volatile oil found in the spice, has antioxidant, cytotoxicity towards cancer cells, anticonvulsant and antidepressant properties.
  • Αlfa-crocin, a carotenoid compound, which gives the spice its characteristic golden yellow color, has anti-oxidant, anti-depressant, and anti-cancer properties.

Stuffed Baked Apples

 
The apples are soft, but still with a slight crisp and the stuffing is caramelized and crunchy.  Yummy!
 
Hospital9

 

4 apples (I used Fuji, but use whatever your favorite is)
1 cup water
1/8 cup lemon juice
1/2 cup agave nectar or honey
1/2 cup finely chopped almonds
1/2 cup craisins
1 tsp cinnamon
a couple dashes ground nutmeg
a dash ground cloves
 
Preheat oven to 350.  Using a melon baller or just a knife and spoon to make an opening in the top and dig out the core of the apple, being sure not to poke a whole in the bottom.  Mix the water and lemon juice and pour in the bottom of a glass baking dish, setting your cored apples in it.  Mix all remaining ingredients in a bowl.  Spoon almond, craison mixture into apples until they are overflowing.  Bake for about an hour.   
 
 
* If you use honey try buying from a local bee keeper especially if you’re prone to seasonal allergies.  If you do then your eating honey made by bees who pollinate plants from your area to make honey.  So by eating local honey you build up an immunity essentially to the pollen and can significantly help with these seasonal allergies.    
*Agave nectar is a sweetener like honey but it is a low glycemic sweetener.  www.theglycemicindex.com explains it best:
“Not all carbohydrate foods are created equal, in fact they behave quite differently in our bodies. The glycemic index or GI describes this difference by ranking carbohydrates according to their effect on our blood glucose levels. Choosing low GI carbs – the ones that produce only small fluctuations in blood glucose and insulin levels – is the secret to long-term health reducing your risk of heart disease and diabetes and is the key to sustainable weight loss.”
 

 

Lemon Pasta & Chicken

I recently made this dinner for a friend who’d just had a baby.  All of my kids were colicy babies and the best remedy for their upset, gassy tummies was fennel. Rubbing some fennel essential oil onto their tummy helped a lot, but I’ve always had to be careful about what I eat.  I hope my friend and her adorable new little guy had a very peaceful evening after this mild dinner.    
 
 

1 – 13 oz. box gluten free penne noodles     
2 large chicken breasts, cut into strips      
1 tbsp. extra virgin olive oil                      
2 tsp. fennel seeds                                  
1 garlic clove                                          
salt and pepper to taste                            
juice from one lemon                              
5-6 mini crimini mushrooms, sliced          
2 celery stocks, diced                              
3 green onions                                        
1 cup chicken stock                                
2-3 rosemary sprigs, or 2 tsp dried          
4-5 thyme sprigs, or 1/2 tbsp dried          
2 parsley stems
5-6 basil leaves
lemon zest
1 cup frozen peas
Parmesan cheese

Cook pasta in salted water according to box. Pull out frozen peas and let them thaw on the counter. Heat olive oil in large skillet.  Add fennel seeds and garlic until they sizzle.  Drop the chicken in. Salt, pepper and add lemon juice (or you could just use the Lemon & Pepper seasoning if you want). When chicken’s browned on the outside and mostly done remove from pan and set aside.  Throw in the mushrooms and celery and let them cook 3-4 minutes until celery softens (you may have to add more olive oil). Pour in the stock, onions, herbs and return the chicken.  Let simmer about 5 minutes while you drain the pasta.  Pour hot penne into skillet and toss, adding more olive oil, salt and pepper.  zest the lemon into pasta, add the peas and toss again. Top with grated Parmesan cheese.
 
*Fennel is a natural tummy soother and gas-reliever.  As most nursing mom’s know, what you eat effects your milk and subsequently your baby.  I used to actually put fennel seeds in a tea ball, steep in hot water and drink for maximum potency while I was nursing.  It made a HUGE difference for my fussy babies.
 
*Fennel sort of has a mild black liquorish flavor and if you’re not a fan of black liquorish (I’m not either) don’t be turned off.  Combined with this light and lemony pasta and chicken dish your taste buds and tummy will both love it. 

Smokey Southwestern Rice Wraps

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4 strips bacon
1 garlic clove, pressed
2 ½ cups chicken broth
1 cup brown rice
Red pepper flakes to taste
1 cup frozen corn
1 can black beans, drained and rinsed
1/2-1 cup {Homemade} Salsa
2 green onion, chopped
6-8 corn  tortillas, heated in a non-stick pan
1/2 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1 ripe avocado
Combine broth, rice, garlic and red pepper flakes.  Bring to a boil then turn down and let simmer on medium low.  Start the rice about 45 minutes before you want to eat.  Chill out while the rice works.  When rice has about 10 more minutes start cooking the bacon till crispy. Crumble bacon and set aside. Drain excess grease (leave just a little).  In the same pan that you cooked the bacon, pour in the rice (its okay if there’s still a little water in it)   Scrap the bottom of the pan to get all the bits up.   Add salsa, black beans, and corn.  Simmer till water is completing gone.  Stir in crumbled bacon and onions. Top with fresh avocado and cheese. 

* Brown rice is far superior to white rice in so many ways.  Yes, it takes longer to make, but as long as you have an idea ahead of time that you want rice then it’s not a problem.  

Spinach Mushroom Frittata

Spinach Mushroom Fritatta

6-8 large eggs
1 box frozen spinach, thawed and water squeezed out.  Or chop up some fresh spinach.
2 stems fresh parsley leafs, chopped
5-8 basil leaves, chopped
2 green onions, sliced up
3-4 baby portabella mushroom tops, sliced
¼ cup freshly grated parmesan cheese
 A splash (about ¼ cup) almond milk. You can use the sweetened or unsweetened kind.      
dash of nutmeg (opt.)
Salt and pepper to taste
1 tsp. grapeseed oil
Preheat oven to 350.  Combine all ingredients except grapeseed oil. Beat everything together with a fork.  Pour grapeseed oil into a 9.5 inch round, glass dish (the frittata comes out easier in glass).  Take a paper towel and rub the oil around the inside of the dish.  Pour the egg mixture in and bake for 30 minutes or until no longer runny or wiggly when gently shaken.
  • Grapeseed oil, unlike most other vegetables oils, has a much higher smoke point allowing you to cook with it without altering or destroying nutrients found in it.  It also contains one of highest concentration of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats (good fat J) and the lowest levels of saturated fat (bad fat L).  Plus it’s packed full of vitamin E (great for skin ladies!)  and omega 6.
  • I read a book called, The China Study, Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss and Longer-Term Health.  (Yes, I’m kind of a dork)  But it was so interesting and essentially went through all the most deadly and disturbingly common killers of Americans (Heart disease, cancer, diabetes, autoimmune diseases etc.).  In the book Dr. Campbell discusses how, through the most comprehensive study done in China, he and others dicovered the link between diet and these diseases.  Most especially dangerous was….(are you ready for this?)  Dairy.  Almond milk is a great alternative and super good for the whole family.  (p.s. soy milk has been shown to cause adverse effects on women’s hormones.) 
  • May I just put a plug in for having an herb garden?  I only have parsley and basil right now, but oh my goodness what a difference it has made in the taste of my food! 
“Spices and herbs like basil and rosemary not only provide flavor for your food, but also offer significant health benefits. The natural oils found in these herbs help fight cancer, diabetes and other diseases, and may even help you keep your weight in check according to the University of Colorado Extension. While fresh and dried herbs both offer benefits to your health, fresh herbs often pack a more powerful punch in terms of nutrients, taste and cancer-fighting free radicals.”

Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/298149-nutrition-of-fresh-herbs-vs-dried/#ixzz1MZZo96Hg