Thursday, February 25, 2010

KITCHEN SINK, MEXICAN STYLE

KITCHEN SINK, MEXICAN STYLE

So, the hubby is trying to eat a low-sodium/low-carb/no oil diet, which makes cooking with flavor sometimes, uh, challenging. But I'm adapting...here's something I threw together last night that turned out really well...but I didn't expect it to be particularly good, so I didn't get a picture of it. Next time!

Ingredients:
(Makes 2-3 entree portions)

1/2 Meyer lemon
10-15 baby carrots
Crushed garlic (approximately 1 Tbsp.)
1/2 can garbanzo beans, drained and rinsed
1 yellow squash, chopped
2 zucchinis, chopped
1 small white onion, thickly sliced
1/2 yellow bell pepper, chopped
1 bunch cilantro, roughly chopped (top 2/3 only)
1 bay leaf
Dried oregano (approximately 1/2 tsp.)
Garlic powder (approximately 1 tsp.)
Cumin powder (approximately 2 tsp.)
Black pepper (approximately 1/2 tsp.)
Dash of paprika

Directions:

1. Squeeze most of the lemon juice into a non-stick pan over medium-high heat. Add a few spoonfuls of water.

2. Once it's steamy, add carrots. Cook for 1 minute and add crushed garlic and whole lemon half. Stir well and cook for a few more minutes.

3. Add all other ingredients except cilantro. Stir well, cover and cook for approximately 7 minutes.

4. Remove cover, add cilantro, and cook 5 more minutes or until veggies and beans are tender.

5. Remove lemon and bay leaf. Serve with brown rice cous cous (made by Lundberg and available at health food stores).

Notes:

*For truly "no salt" diets, look for no sodium canned garbanzo beans (Fresh & Easy sells them).

*For more flavor & less healthfulness, top with a generous sprinkling of Trader Joe's Mexican Shredded Cheese and/or your favorite salsa.

*Kids (at least my picky eater) seem to like the brown rice cous cous better than brown rice or cous cous. Go figure.

*Kids can help by cutting zucchini or squash with a butter knife if you're not concerned about uniformity of chunk size, or can sprinkle on the optional cheese (always a crowd pleaser).

*Have I mentioned that Meyer lemons are what all other lemons aspire to be? I wouldn't try making this with a regular lemon - probably too sour and not enough depth of flavor.