Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Yogurt Goes Bananas...

It’s a banana? It’s frozen yogurt? It’s both??

For a few months now, I’ve been faithfully practicing my frozen yogurt making abilities. I think I’m pretty good at it too.

Thankfully, I am in no way making actual frozen yogurt, but rather using a wonderful appliance called “Yonanas.” Get it? Yogurt and bananas, but it’s much more than a portmanteau.

This lovely machine turns a frozen banana into ice cream consistency. That’s right, it needs ONLY a banana. I had heard that whipping up this frozen fruit in a food processor would yield similar results but had never tried it. However, once I saw this machine, I knew it was for me.

Frozen bananas = ice cream!
I am an avid ice cream fan. While I am quite the healthy eater most of the time, I partake in the frozen treat at least twice a week. I don’t think that’s anything crazy, but I’ll gladly take any help I can get with my ice cream habit. Yonanas offers an incredible alternative to ice cream. Obviously, it only uses a banana, which starts me off in a much better direction than all the cream, sugar, and fat. The Yonanas machine whips up the frigid fruit into a wonderfully smooth and rich consistency and is the perfect base to add a few things to dress it up a bit.

The idea is to keep this as a more healthy option than ice cream, so I try to keep the mix-ins limited. I have settled into a routine of 1-1 ½ banana(s), a swirl of Santa Cruz Organic Chocolate Syrup, a healthy sprinkle of cinnamon, and a few dark chocolate chips. The chocolate syrup will quickly add all the sugar back in as if you still had a bowl of the decadent stuff, so be particularly careful with that one. Otherwise, this treat is an awesome answer to any ice cream fix.

I do have to say (and this may be obvious but I’ll say it anyway), you need to be a banana fan to get into this. While the marketing folks at Yonana claim that the treat will have a pretty neutral taste and only a hint of banana, there’s a lot of banana flavor going on in actuality. Otherwise, the only negative I’ve encountered with this appliance is having to “harvest” the “yogurt” from the various parts of the machine after it is done mixing. It only takes a few seconds to push the banana all the way down into the chute, but I remember thinking, “is anything going to come out?” I have to disassemble the parts (which has to be done for cleaning after every use anyway) and scrape out the yogurt - a bit of a pain, but not too terrible in the grand scheme.

An indulgence of Zwahlen's hot fudge!

While it has its inconveniences, I am very pleased overall with what this appliance has to offer. If you’re a fellow ice cream obsessor and fan of bananas, this thing is for you!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Redhound Grille...

I was recently enlightened about a new nearby restaurant when a friend mentioned how great her dinner was the other night at Redhound Grille. She said it would be up my alley considering its attention to detail and quality ingredients. I knew I would have to give it a try when she talked about the head chef’s efforts to cater to a member of my friend’s dining party who lives with Celiac disease. The chef came out and spoke to this person one-on-one about expectations and preparation of the meal. That is what I call some superior customer service and evidence of the chef’s from-scratch approach to cooking. Additionally, the house selects and grinds all of its own meat for burgers (a menu staple) so if I were to pig out on some beef, this would be the place. I didn’t during this visit, but it’s still a highlight for me.

Art had a turkey sandwich of some sort which was ok, nothing to brag about. We both had a healthy portion of sweet potato fries, and they were outstanding. My entrée was the house-made veggie burger, and the kicker that made me order it was goat cheese and mango salsa for toppings. I thoroughly enjoyed it and I think it was the best veggie burger I have had, and I've had quite a few!


The grille posts its specials DAILY for dinner on its web site so make sure to check it out. It uses local, organic ingredients whenever possible and has an “off-the-beaten-path” location in residential Paoli. I hope to get back there sometime soon.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Food Tastes Better When…

Living Social got some of my business a while back when I bought a coupon for a box of produce from Suburban Organics. Not only is all of this company’s produce certified organic, but it also delivers right to your doorstep!

I was already excited about getting a $25 box at half the price through this deal, but I would soon discover a cooking method that would make this deal even sweeter.

When trying a new restaurant or obtaining a deal such as this, I try to branch out and take on a new culinary adventure. Whether it be a different way of preparation, unique presentation, or new ingredient, I do my best to stretch myself when life allows. In this case along with some staple produce in my order, I selected beets as my new experience. I know beets aren’t anything new, but I think I’ve only ever eaten them once or twice and I certainly had never prepared them.

Beets and Blood Orange
Much to my delight after placing my order, I started researching my options for preparing beets and I realized I could eat the entire plant! Now that’s value! So I decided to keep the roots fairly simple and roasted them with olive oil, salt and pepper. However, I also received a few blood oranges in my box and decided to juice one, make a vinaigrette, cut up another for segments and harvest some zest. It was like McDonald’s, because I was lovin’ it.


Food tastes even better when it's a great value!
The other part of this plant is of course its leaves. When I prepared the roots, I cleaned and stored the leaves for later use. After a few days of insecurity, I picked up some locally made sweet potato gnocchi to pair with the beet greens. I must say it was a great combo. I liked this dish even more than the beets themselves! (Of course, I think my brain made both taste even better because of my living social deal and the ability to consume the entire plant.)

I only used Suburban Organics that one time, but it was a great experience. If I didn’t have the local farmer’s market options that I do have, I would take advantage of it more frequently. I am at least able to say I found a new root to try a few more times when they’re at the market this summer.




Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Nashville - Bite Deux...

The neighborhood of East Nashville is an up and coming part of the suburbs that is making its mark as a more trendy and modern part of town for locals to enjoy. I researched two places located within the same complex and both establishments were right on point with my dietary convictions and palate’s desires.

Up first, The Wild Cow – a delightful vegan restaurant with tons of options and a killer GF dessert menu. While I’m not a fan of meat substitutes (esp conventional) and I steered clear of that night’s special of a Buffalo Philly "Cheesesteak," what did come to the table was wonderful. I had a house-made veggie burger with sautéed garlicky kale and a big glass of hazelnut milk.Yum. Art went with something she knew, a veggie quinoa bowl, and it was also excellent. I mentioned a dessert menu because it did not disappoint. I had to try that night’s “raw” cake offering because I had never heard of a raw cake. Apparently, its a pureed mixture of soaked nuts and takes quite the process to create. Mine was lemon-blueberry and it was so good! It is similar to cheesecake in texture, but packed with nutrients, protein, and great flavor!

Second, The Silly Goose – a more farm-to-fork driven menu with locally produced everything! Art said the turkey sandwich was wonderful with cranberries, brie and a basil aioli and I went with a sandwich of eggplant, red pepper and avocado. We had the pleasure of ending our dining experience at the Goose with house-made ice cream. The chef had some incredible flavor combos, and we had the Vanilla Nutmeg and Rosemary Fennel Seed. Unbelievable. I was going to post a pic of this too, but it just looks like vanilla ice cream! It tasted so much better than it looked.

Nashville was extremely tasty. Don’t be afraid to research local food options when traveling because there are too many incredible, neighborhood restaurants in every town. Break loose from the chains and eat locally even when you’re out of town.

Eating locally away from home!