Author Archives: Cherylanne Skolnicki

Tips to Manage Treat Overload!

Are you wondering what to do with all of that leftover Halloween candy? If your kids have already fished out their favorites and sampled their not-so-favorites, and you’re ready to be done with the sugar-induced craziness, I have two ideas for you!

1 – Invite the Halloween Fairy!
I was recently introduced to the idea of the Halloween Fairy, a lovely gal who apparently arrives a week or so after Halloween to gather up any uneaten candy and leave a toy in return! A new DVD, a Leapster game, an iTunes gift card, a Barbie, whatever the little ghosts and goblins in your house deem worthy of their sugar stash. I love this idea; I’m hoping she visits OUR house!  As for what the Halloween Fairy might DO with all that candy…

2 – Send your treats to our troops via Operation Gratitude
Operation Gratitude collects extra Halloween candy to be used in care packages for our troops. You simply ship a box of your candy to the following address:


Operation Gratitude/California Army National Guard
17330 Victory Boulevard
Van Nuys, CA 91406
Charlie Othold:  818.437.6201
 


You can get more information by emailing OpGrat@gmail.com.

So…enjoy your favorite Halloween treats and then share the wealth. You can feel good knowing that you’ve done something sweet for yourself, your kids, and our troops. 

Celebrate World Vegan Day

Monday, November 1st is World Vegan Day. Initiated in 1994 by the President of the Vegan Society in the UK, it is now celebrated with festivities in multiple cities around the world.

Vegans are vegetarians who abstain from all animal products, including all meat, poultry, fish, eggs, dairy and honey. A vegan diet can be incredibly healthful if followed properly, but it requires a significant commitment to uphold and it isn’t right for everyone. I certainly applaud the people who have made that commitment and are living as vegans (famous vegans include Alicia Silverstone, Ellen DeGeneres, Woody Harrelson, Jared Lito, Lea Michele, Natalie Portman, Bryan Adams, Alannis Morissette, Jason Mraz, Prince, and others), but there are some gentler forms of vegetarianism gaining momentum as well. Former President Bill Clinton recently became a vegetarian in an attempt to reverse his heart disease. Don’t snicker though…there’s actually a lot of evidence showing that a plant-based diet approach actually WORKS!

Not only that, but a vegetarian diet is far easier on the planet than a meat-based diet is. It takes a lot of natural resources to feed all the animals being raised for livestock!  

I was a vegetarian (not a vegan) for a number of years, but have been eating meat for the last 15 years or so. Lately, I’ve been eating less of it, having many meatless meals a week, a practice which would make me a “flexitarian“. I love this idea, because it lets me reap many of the benefits of a healthy vegetarian diet, while still enjoying meat and dairy sometimes!

In honor of World Vegan Day, maybe you’d like to have a meatless meal on Monday. That doesn’t mean you have to go buy tofu or seitan…there are endless options for how to put together a simple meatless meal. In fact, you probably already have many in your repertoire…especially if you allow for eggs and dairy!


I’ll bet you already make or order some of these:

  • Eggplant Parmigiana
  • Spaghetti with Marinara Sauce
  • Cheese Ravioli
  • Manicotti
  • Pasta in pesto sauce
  • Veggie Pizza
  • Vegetable Lo Mein
  • Vegetable Soup
  • Vegetable Pot Pie
  • Black beans and rice
  • Black bean burritos
  • Cheese enchiladas
  • Butternut Squash Soup
  • Black Bean Soup
  • Tomato Soup (+ grilled cheese = yum!)
  • etc.

These are all a good starting point, and once you start to play with meatless meals, you can really dial  up the healthfulness of your choices, choosing whole grains like brown rice or quinoa or barley and adding beans and vegetables and seasonings while limiting the amount of cheese. It’s much easier than it sounds, and absolutely delicious.


There are a number of great resources on vegetarian cooking. Here are a few cookbooks that I really like:


  

   

C’mon, give it a try…one meatless meal in honor of World Vegan Day…your body (and the planet) will thank you!

Pumpkin Biscuits

Boo! It’s Halloween weekend, folks. Time to be barraged by candy or trick-or-treaters or both. I giggled out loud this week when I read a friend’s Facebook post. “wondering how people will react on Halloween when they say ‘Trick or Treat’ and I throw a four-year-old in their bag…..” (She has 4-year-old TRIPLETS!) 

At my house, the munchkins have been practicing wearing their costumes and looking for treats all week! We’ve already had dress-up days at both schools, a Father-Son Pumpkin Carve at preschool, a Mother-Daughter pumpkin carve at home, a trip to the pumpkin patch, a trip to a farm with – yes – more pumpkins, and a kindergarten costume parade! Still ahead? A haunted walk through the woods, a neighbor’s Halloween bash (complete with a live band!), and, of course, trick-or-treating! Despite this embarrassment of Halloween riches, I’m going to squeeze in one more treat…these delightful Pumpkin Biscuits.

Light and flaky, these would make the perfect breakfast treat for a crisp weekend morning or a great complement to a steaming bowl of your favorite fall soup. Biscuits take hardly any time to make and you’ll feel so accomplished by the time you gently cut them with an overturned glass (because, really, who has a biscuit cutter?). A little icing jack-o-lantern face would be adorable…


Pumpkin Biscuits 
adapted from Cooking Light, 2008

makes 14

2 c. flour
2 1/2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. pumpkin pie spice
1/2 tsp. salt
5 Tbsp. cold butter, cut into small pieces
1/3 c. lowfat buttermilk
3/4 c. canned pumpkin (NOT pumpkin pie filling!)
3 Tbsp. honey


Directions:
1. Heat oven to 400.
2. Combine flour, baking powder, pumpkin pie spice, and salt in a bowl. Cut in butter with a pastry blender or a large fork until mixture looks like coarse meal. Chill 10 minutes.
3. Whisk together buttermilk and honey; add canned pumpkin. Add buttermilk mixture to flour mixture and stir until just moist.
4. Dump dough onto a floured cutting board and knead lightly. Roll dough into a 9×5 rectangle (about 1/2″ thick). Sprinkle top of dough with flour and fold dough into thirds. Reroll dough into a 9X5″ rectangle (again, about 1/2″ thick) and dust dough with flour. Fold dough into thirds again and pat it to 3/4″ thickness. Cut dough with a 1 3/4″ biscuit cutter (or an overturned glass measuring about that diameter). 
5. Place uncooked biscuits onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Bake at 400 for 14 minutes or until golden brown. 
6. Cool 2 minutes on wire racks and serve warm.