She Serves Seared Sea Scallops

Dry Sea Scallops (Day Boat Scallops) are large, sweet flavorful scallops that have no water (or other liquids) injected into them.  You can tell when you cook them because they won’t release any water.  My family loves the sweetness of the scallops when they’re seared, which also retains the soft juiciness.  

Blanch or steam your vegetables first.  Prepare rice, grains or potatoes.   When they’re done or 5 minutes away from finished you can cook the scallops.

 

Heat pan then add one Tbsp of grapeseed oil (doesn’t impart contradicting flavors and has a high burning point -won’t smoke and turn brown at higher temps) until hot.  Put the scallops (can season with salt and pepper if you wish but be careful if using salty sauce) in the pan starting with largest ones first (lay out on plate first to see the sizes).  Flip over once nice and brown (like above).  Once second side is browned and they look whiter, less translucent, they should be ready to serve.   It only takes a few minutes.  You can always cut into one to check for doneness if you’re unsure.  You don’t want to overcook as they’ll get tough and rubbery.  

We served ours with a Ponzu (citrus soy) sauce my husband made (but you can find a decent bottled one from Trader Joe’s).  Usually made with yuzu juice, which is hard to find, you can substitute oj, lemon and lime juices with the tamari soy sauce, bonito flakes and rice wine vinegar.  Careful though as a little goes a long way!  If you’d like the measurements just ask me.

We also served rice, avocado salsa, spinach, cucumber salad and corn— in a method many friends have adopted.  It’s kind of like lazy lobster but with corn.  Boil the corn until done then shock in cold water.  Cut the corn kernels off the cob (just don’t go too far into the cob center or you’ll get the harder parts that hold the kernels onto the cob) and put in a pan with a pat or two of butter, sea salt and pepper.   Everyone loves the taste and kids who are loosing their front teeth can still eat one of their favorite vegetables!

If there are any recipes or methods you’d like to know, just ask me!

© 2010 mykidsreallyeatthis.com

On the subject of picky children who visit one’s home

a post by “sailingallegro”

One of the best ways to get children to try new foods is peer pressure.  My boys have often ventured out of their food comfort zones based on their friends’ diets.  Likewise, visiting friends will test out some celery sticks (or whatever) when my boys say, “These are really great!”

My response: 

We’ve tried that with the vistors before and it once ended with a boy throwing up the food on the table.  I felt awful and that I had traumatized him.  So, I try not to get my kids to put too much pressure, just persuasive suggestions.  My eldest is always telling his friends, “Try it, it’s great!” but we’ve found it has mixed results.

Homemade Bread- No Knead

Last week I mentioned my desire to make bread for the kids (and me, love my carbs!) but didn’t have the time to make the no knead recipe I’d seen by Mark Bittman in the NY Times.  It comes from the Sullivan St Bakery and found on their site.  Since I had planned it out this time around I could make it. 

I am not a huge baker and like to cook because I can improvise; in baking it’s very important to follow directions.  I guess I just have a hard time doing that, even here.  So, I decided to use 1/3 Spelt flour  and 2/3 unbleached wheat flour.  I also looked up some yeast starter recipes too becuase I love a good sour dough.  I didn’t have the time to let the yeast ferment but I started it ahead of the rest of the mixing.  I took 1/3 of the flour mixture, the yeast, one cup of water and a teaspoon of organic cane sugar.  I let it sit in a warm place in a glass container for a couple of hours.  Then I mixed the rest of the flour, salt and water in with my starter.  For the first 8 or so hours the day was warm and I let the dough rise in the calphalon dutch as directed, but when I woke up the next day to turn/pull it I noticed how the sudden temperature drop affected the rising, it had sunk a little. 

This is the pre-oven state.  It never regained that really puffy state because it wasn’t as warm, but when I got it out of the oven, saw the golden top, cut it, and smelled the waft of fresh yeasty bread, I was so thrilled.  The taste totally lived up to the sight and smell.  And my kids loved it!  So did everyone lucky enough to have a taste—a friend I brought a taste to, my husband and I.  

If you see from the recipe, it does not take a lot of hands-on time.  Plus you can give your kids the most wholesome hard-crusted, soft-centered bread without the unnecessary vitamins (if they eat well, you don’t need fortified bread, cereal, oj, etc, etc.) and other ingredients.

© 2010 mykidsreallyeatthis.com

Re: Chicken nuggets. Bypass nuggets altogether! Keep packages of drumsticks in the freezer. It doesn’t take long to thaw them in the microwave, or, if you know dinner will need to be quick leave out on the counter in the morning). Toss them with olive oil, salt & pepper and roast at 425°F for about 12 minutes. We haven’t served a chicken nugget at home in about 7 years.

I put Penzy’s Mural of Flavor on my drumsticks too. The kids love the ability to pick them up with their fingers and not have me say, “Use your fork please.”

Bell & Evans Chicken Breast Nuggest Ingredients: Chicken Breast Meat, Water, Sea Salt, Breaded with Rice Flour, Water Yellow Corn Flour Xantham gum, Evaporated Cane Juice, Sea Salt, Soybean oil, Yeast, Ascorbic Acid, Whole Egg, Spice Flash pan fried in soybean oil to set breading. Discuss.

A few things come to mind:

1. Why do they need sugar in chicken nuggets? 

2. Corn Flour- something like 80+% of US corn is GMO, and we get corn from too many sources.

3. Though Xantham gum is considered “natural” it is there to make it stick- but doesn’t the egg do that?   Plus for those with wheat or gluten allergies should be cautious of ingesting xantham gum.  Just another over-processed derivative.

4. Soybean oil- we’re overdoing soybeans like we overdo corn. More and more soybeans are GMO and they’re heavily subsidised.  Also another Omega-6 oil that can interfere with Omega-3’s. 

5. Citric Acid comes from citrus fruits but another thing that is a derivative instead of natural state.  It is used as a meat tenderizer and a preservative.  It can cause stomach upset (especially those with IBS).

6. It still is probably the “best” choice out there for non-homemade nuggets.  Backup for those days where you’ve got no time for thinking “What to cook?”

It can happen… in time.

I just finished a spur-of-the-moment dinner with a friend and her kids. They are my biggest challenge. Not all of them, really just two. But since they aren’t mine I can only suggest, but not as persuasively as I would with my own. With my kids they get what they get and they don’t get upset.  Well, at least I ignore if they whine and try to make sure they get everything I’ve made— with a few modifications— like not giving the child who absolutely won’t eat a certain vegetable that one if there are other veggies to serve him.  But this is different; these two are extremely picky and I feel bad if I can’t get them to at least try some things. I certainly won’t push and just try to find things they will like. This is where the hiding foods inside other things might work. But I think it will happen in time if they’re not made to feel bad about their choices and stress them out.

I had originally planned to make this great pork stir-fry I created from a hodgepodge of several recipes. Since time was not on my side and I knew none of the other kids would eat it I made Mystic & Trader Joe’s Pizzas that I had in the freezer and made a large (what I consider) kid-friendly salad. It was romaine, orange bell pepper, cucumbers, celery, and red cabbage. I used a Paul Newman’s dressing because, again, it was late.  I love these children and their mom and I’d rather them stick around longer with something they would eat than scare them away with my cooking.  One of her kids actually tried something for the first time!

When should you start kids eating healthfully?  From the beginning. Is it ever too late? Probably not; there are plenty of stories of people becoming chefs or food critics because their parents were awful cooks or didn’t feed them well. And as my mother says kids get on “jags” of things and will eat something until you’d want to puke before eating it yet again, yet they’re perfectly healthy. But then there are the other stories, the ones more common these days, of childhood obesity, diabetes and other health issues. I look around and see so many kids and teens who don’t look healthy and I assume (maybe incorrectly) that they don’t eat well.

If your parents didn’t feed you well, how do you change? Is it harder to learn to eat well if you were brought up with bad food choices? I think those who’ve been eating well from day one (or at least from 6 months old) have several advantages- they will have better health benefits from an earlier age and less likely to be obese or ill; they will have a better relationship with food; less likely to have food-related issues or constantly on the latest diet; they will enjoy food for the tastes and pass on the suitable food lessons to their own children. But that doesn’t mean you’re doomed if you got a bad start. I know my friend’s mother was a bad cook and had issues with food, but my friend is trying to give her kids the healthier choices and never once have I felt her decisions were made because she doesn’t care, she just didn’t have the same foundation that I had. But she’s learning really quickly and for that I’m proud of her. She even says I inspire her, which is flattering. Her kids are beautiful, inside and out, and I am so happy they will have a better start than their mom. 

So, my tips on a proper foundation: start them off feeding them those strained beans they might spit out a few times, not just the apple, pears and sweet potatoes. Eat with them. Let them see what you eat, feed them what you eat. Get them interested in foods by planting vegetables, shopping at farmers’ markets or farms and cooking with them. Don’t treat the vegetables like a punishment, they are delicious, but kids need to get accustomed to them.  Don’t quit. Really your kids will eat them.  

Eventually.