all the ingredients on the counter

a year ago, i posted a long and detailed explanation of march madness around here (waaay back before this was a food blog), and here we are a year later, actively caught up in the middle of it again.  before you get the wrong impression and think that we’re huge basketball fans, let me stop and clarify – march is the month of birth for practically everyone we know.  ok, that’s an exaggeration, but you get the idea.  every weekend this month has been full of celebrations (and desserts!), and to add some extra fun, we’re flying out to indiana to spend time with my great-uncle, who is turning 99 this week!

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i’ve been thinking about food a lot this week.  as you might guess, this is not entirely unusual for me — as i am a major food lover and, obviously, blogger.  but this week, i’ve been thinking especially hard about food for a few reasons.  the first is that i began reading the book in defense of food, by michael pollan.  i labored my way through his first book, omnivore’s dilemma, perhaps because i am not an omnivore (there are long chapters about killing wild pigs and the beef industry that are slightly nauseating), or perhaps because it seemed too close to something i might have read in one of the many sociology classes i took in college – assigned but not thoroughly enjoyed reading.  the second book, however, is my first suggestion to you – i am tearing through it, and taking a lot of what he says to heart.  what’s really resonated for me is his discussion of the importance of real, whole foods (not the store) – avocado, bananas, carrots, etc – instead of eating filler foods chemically designed to taste good and supply nutrients deemed important by the fda (think most commercial breakfast cereals and packaged frozen dinners).  pollan questions whether food scientists have figured out what’s important for people to consume yet, and notes that food is about so much more than nutrients – it’s about the act of cooking with friends and family, interacting with them, savoring the taste of the food, and yes, there are nutrients in whole foods, but they are only part of the process. (thanks for hosting this “process” aka dinner this week, linn!)

fixings for green pizzazucchinispreading the pestolaying out the zucchini

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you may have noticed that posts have been a little further apart than usual around here lately, and i sincerely apologize. i’ve been spending most of my computer time obsessing over the new features in apple’s iLife ’09, and to be even more specific, i’ve been consumed with the faces feature in iPhoto. this new feature goes through your iPhoto library (mine dates back to ’01 with a few scanned pics from earlier years) and identifies the faces in all the photos using fancy face detection software. next, you provide a name to go with the faces of your friends and family members (i used my wedding photos for this because they contain just about everyone we know). after that, the program starts to get scary smart and suggests other photos that might contain these people as well. the program isn’t foolproof, though, and this led to me revisiting every single photo on my computer to correctly identify every single face.

ready to simmer

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butternut squashcutting off the endsbeautiful squashDSC_0296.JPG

many years ago, my mom gave us a cookbook entitled the one-dish vegetarian: 100 recipes for quick and easy vegetarian meals, by maria robbins. when we were first gifted the book, it was the beginning of our get-fit-2003 campaign, and mike and i poured over every recipe in an effort to discover delicious, healthy, and quick recipes that would accommodate our new lifestyle of exercising daily and eating smaller and healthier portions of food. the title of the book is almost exactly what you get—super fast and easy meals that can be served in one dish (although it often takes more than one dish to make them, which made me feel a little duped—i was looking forward to less dishes to wash!). we dog-eared the pages of the recipes we wanted to make and found several keepers, ones that became part of our regular repertoire. years passed, more cookbooks were purchased, and this one began to gather some dust on our cookbook shelf.

DSC_0302.JPG

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in my last post, i inundated all of you with lots and lots of cookie recipes. so i thought that in this week, post-holiday festivities and indulgences, i would give you a hearty, low cal, and extremely satisfying recipe.

beets, fennel, sweet potatoes, oranges

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