Warm Rice Salad with Blood Orange Vinaigrette + 5 Rice Salad Links

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Here it is.  My feel good, good for you January salad straight from Brooklyn Supper.  This beauty contains warm whole grain rice dressed with a light and bright blood orange vinaigrette made more complex with minced shallots and a good squeeze of mild honey. Rainbow Swiss chard is sautéed in a bit olive oil along with a sliced shallot and tossed into the salad; after all greens are a must (for many) in January.  Next come the add-on(s): raw pepitas, dried tart cherries, chives, peeled blood orange rounds and feta.  I could eat this pairing everyday.  And I did, until it disappeared.

Now back to sweets, after all January is almost over.

Warm Rice Salad with Blood Orange Vinaigrette

Serves 4 to 6

very slightly adapted from Brooklyn Supper

Ingredients for vinaigrette:

1 tablespoon blood orange zest

3 tablespoons blood orange juice

1 tablespoon Dijon mustard

2 tablespoons minced shallot

1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

1/4 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper

1/2 olive oil

good squeeze of a mild honey

Directions:

Grab a small bowl and whisk together the blood orange zest, juice, shallot, mustard, salt and pepper.  Continue to whisk while slowly adding the olive oil.  Whisk until the dressing is well combined and thick.  Add a squeeze of honey. Whisk. Taste.  Repeat if you want it more sweet.

Ingredients for the rice salad:

1 cup dry black rice or wild rice

Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

1/4 cup raw pepitas

1/4 dried tart cherries

2 tablespoons EVOO

1 shallot, sliced

1 bunch of rainbow chard, chopped

3 medium blood oranges, peeled and sliced into rounds

2 tablespoons, chopped chives

1/2 cup feta cheese (optional but delicious)

Directions:

Cook rice according to package directions.  Strain excess water and toss cooked rice with 1/4 cup of vinaigrette.  Set aside.

Using a medium skillet, sauté (medium heat) the sliced shallots in the olive oil until they just begin to brown, about 2 minutes.  Add the chopped chard and a bit of sea salt.  Continue to sauté until the chard begins to wilt, about 5 minutes.

Add the shallots and chard to the rice.  Add the cherries, pepitas and more dressing.  Toss.  Taste.  Add salt, if needed.  Place blood orange rounds throughout the salad.  Lastly, top the salad with the feta, chives and a bit of black pepper.  Serve and enjoy!

**Salad will last refrigerated in an airtight container for several days, though it is best the day it is made.  Eat cold, at room temperature or heated up a little in the microwave.**

5 Rice Salad Links You Can’t Miss!

Looking to be or stay healthy this month?  Head to Del Sole’s for Licias’s take on a superfood salad.

If you love pomegranate seeds you need to check out Pinch of Yum’s pomegranate, kale, wild rice salad with walnuts and feta.

If this salad was my last meal on earth, I would die happy.  Head to one of my favorite blogs, Cookie and Kate for the recipe.

When corn and nectarines are once again abundant, I plan on making Not Without Salt’s green rice salad with nectarines and corn.  Summer, summer, summer…

The kitchn’s chopped brown rice salad with grapes and pecans is a salad I plan on making very soon because I am done with grilled cheese crusts and Sunbutter sandwiches…for now. 🙂

Vanilla Bean Popovers + 5 Scrumptious Popover Links

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He sat up in bed, hair tousled, fuzzy, sleep still in his eyes and said: “I had a dream about…popovers.”

“What? Popovers?” My voice raspy, on auto-pilot, not fully connected to the day ahead.  I turned over, pulled the sheets up over my head and thought about the last time I ate a popover.

Jordan Pond House.  Acadia National Park, blue sky, a few clouds, 70 degrees.  Riding a tandem bike with my son and getting lost on trail that should have dropped us at the parking lot where we started.  

“Mama, why is this taking so long?  I’m hungry.” 

Um, ya me too buddy.  My thighs are burning, I feel old.  I guess 30 plus miles of running a week is different than biking for two on a rocky trail with a slight incline.  Damn it.  I can’t wait for a cold beer. 

“Almost there!” I say, lying.  We backtrack, yet are still lost.  I stop a family that looks like they know this space, a space, a place that is so foreign to me.  We turn down the trail the nice, athletic family gestured towards.  There is an opening, a light at the end of the trail and finally I see Jordan Pond House. 

We reunite with Bubba, my oldest and my newest inside the restaurant.  We cheers with bottles of Maine Lunch IPA and blueberry soda.  Giant popovers, still warm sit in front of us with plenty of salted butter and strawberry jam on the side.    

“It’s after 7,” he says and gives me a quick kiss.  His cheek is smooth, morning stubble washed down the drain.  He smells like Dove soap.  I wish I could carry his smell with me all day and take a hit of it when I need more of him.

I pull on a fleece and head downstairs.  The kids sit at the island arguing about ??? and sort of eating a healthy breakfast.  Another gray January morning here.  I pour a cup of coffee, stare out the kitchen window and think of blue sky, mountains and popovers.

Vanilla Bean Popovers

recipe adapted from Martha Stewart

makes 6 large popovers

Ingredients:

3 large eggs, at room temperature

1 + 1/2 cups whole milk, at room temperature

1+1/2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon kosher salt

1 tablespoon sugar

1 vanilla bean, scraped

2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

1/4 cup raw sugar for dusting

cooking spray for pan

Directions:

Allow eggs and milk to come to room temperature.  (If you forget to set them out, place eggs in a bowl with warm water for 10 minutes and gently heat the milk until just warm to the touch.)

Pre-heat the oven to 450F.  Place popover pan or muffin pan in the oven on the lowest rack.  Measure out your dry ingredients and set aside.

When the eggs and milk are ready, whisk them together in a large bowl until well combined.  Add the vanilla and continue to whisk until frothy.

Next add the dry ingredients and whisk until all the ingredients are incorporated and the texture of the batter is like heavy cream.

Take your popover pan out of the oven and coat with cooking spray.  Fill cups about three-quarters of the way full.  Bake for 20 minutes.  Reduce oven temperature to 350F and bake until the popovers are golden brown and dry, about an additional 20 minutes.

Turn the popovers out on a wire rack.  Grab a paring knife and make a slight hole on the side of each popover so the steam can escape.

Brush melted butter over the tops of the popovers and sprinkle with raw sugar.  Serve immediately.  Popovers are best the day they are made.  Enjoy!

5 Popover Links You Need To Check Out!

This popover found only at Jordan Pond House in Acadia National Park started my popover obsession.

Looking for a savory popover that requires no mixer? Head to Damn Delicious for Chungah’s easy garlic Parmesan popovers.

If you have a sweet tooth head to Joy the Baker for her cinnamon sugar popovers or try Martha’s tried and true dark chocolate popovers.

Hate to fail? King Arthur has a recipe for never-fail popovers that promises to…never fail. 🙂