Author Archives: Cherylanne Skolnicki

Sauteed Chicken & Bell Pepper Medley

Here’s a really simple dinner idea that takes advantage of the last of the summer’s peppers. Who wants to be in the kitchen laboring over a complicated recipe when you can be outside enjoying a glass of wine in the cooler evening air? That said, simple doesn’t have to mean bland. If you love peppers, you’ll love this simple little saute. Chicken provides some texture and protein to this dish, but you could substitute tofu or shrimp or even cannellini beans if you prefer.  This is good over pasta or brown rice or quinoa – you just need a neutral grain that will soak up the juice.

A word or two about peppers since I often get questions about peppers during the Nourish Grocery Store Tour. Here’s the scoop. Green, yellow, orange, and red bell peppers all come from the same plant. The colors are each picked at different levels of ripeness (Green is least ripe, red is the most). This gives each color a different level of sweetness (Green is least sweet, red is the most), despite coming from the same plant. Red, yellow, and orange peppers require more time in the ground before harvest which is why they are more expensive.  And I recently learned that their different colors give them different nutritional benefits, too, so it’s wise to eat a variety. Green peppers have an abundance of chlorophyll and twice the vitamin C of an orange! Yellow peppers have more of the lutein and zeaxanthin carotenoids. Orange peppers have more alpha-, beta-, and gamma-carotene. Red peppers have more lycopene and astaxanthin, two other important carotenoids. And now you know!

 

Chicken & Bell Pepper Medley

Serves 4

 

Ingredients:

2 tablespoons olive oil

1 – 1 1/2 lb boneless chicken breasts, thinly sliced

1 cup thinly sliced onion

4  assorted bell peppers, thinly sliced – yellow, red, orange, or green

1 1/2 teaspoon minced garlic

1/4 – 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt

 

Directions:

1. Place a large skillet over medium heat. Allow to heat for 1 minute and then add the olive oil and swirl to coat the pan.

2. Turn the heat to medium-high and add the onion and chicken. Cook until the onion wilts and is translucent and the chicken is almost cooked through – about 5 minutes. Do not let the onion burn.

3. Add the garlic, bell peppers, and salt. Turn the heat down to medium after 1 minute. Cook and stir (tongs work well for this) for about 5 minutes longer. The peppers should be barely cooked.

4. Serve over hot pasta tossed with olive oil or brown rice.

 

 

For healthy packed lunches – think inside the box

It’s painfully easy to fall into the “Sandwich, Chips and a Cookie” rut when it comes to packing lunches for your school age children…or for yourself! This morning on FOX19 in Cincinnati (Here’s a link to the video clip) I shared some ideas for easy, nutritionally balanced lunches that might not be top of mind during the morning rush!

 

To enable this whole plan there are a few containers you may want to have on hand:

1) a reusable lunchbox

2) a thermos or “hot food container” as they are sometimes called

3) a Bento Box, which is a segmented plastic or metal container modeled after the traditional Japanese lunchbox.

Remember Molly Ringwold’s lunchbox in The Breakfast Club? That was a bento! Pottery Barn Kids makes the one I’ve pictured here, but there are many on the market. If you don’t want to get a Bento Box, you can use small Tupperware (or Gladware) containers inside the lunchbox to keep the different foods separate from one another.

 

When it comes to the food itself, I like to compose a lunch with three elements:

1) a complex (whole grain, high fiber) carbohydrate

2) a source of protein

3) fruits and vegetables

Following that simple formula will open up some lunch ideas you might be overlooking.

 

As inspiration, here are 10 ideas for Healthy Lunches that I shared in a recent Nourish e-newsletter :

1) Whole wheat noodles sprayed with olive oil and dusted with parmesan cheese, edamame in the pods (fun!), sliced apples with cinnamon

2) Whole wheat tortilla with melted cheese rolled up and cut, side of salsa for dipping, jicama sticks, banana

3) Vanilla yogurt with sides of granola, nuts (if allowed), berries, carrot sticks

4) Whole wheat crackers with turkey and cheese, mango slices, salad greens with sliced veggies

5) Whole wheat bagel with cream cheese, mixture of nuts and dried fruit, cucumber slices with cherry tomatoes

6) Chicken noodle soup (e.g. Healthy Choice) in a thermos, sugar snap peas, strawberries, greek yogurt

7) Rice, sushi (yes, some kids will eat it and love it!), non-fried spring roll/summer roll, grapes – make sure this one is on ice

8)  Fresh fruit salad (cantaloupe, honeydew, watermelon, grapes, strawberries, pineapple), Cottage cheese or Greek yogurt, graham crackers

9) Quinoa or brown rice pasta with cooked veggies and shredded cheese, a tangerine “cutie”, fresh blueberries and raspberries

10) Leftovers! If you’ve served a healthy dinner, let it do double duty. Heat up a portion of leftovers and put it in a thermos/hot food container. Add a side of fruit and lunch is served.

As for beverages, it’s best to send a small stainless steel water bottle daily – for variety you can add a splash of juice or use sparkling water. Horizon makes shelf-stable organic milk in single serve containers that pack well and an Honest Tea juice bag makes a good treat.

Importantly, while you’re packing lunches for your children, think about what you might pack for yourself using the same ideas. Too many women skip lunch altogether, robbing themselves of much-needed energy for their long afternoon and evening. My final piece of advice? Give yourself a lunch break too!

Blueberry-Lemon Bread

Since I was touting the benefits of after-school snacks earlier this week, it seems only fitting that I should offer up a suggestion as to what one might serve on such an occasion. While I feel it’s important that snacks usually provide a nutritionally sound mini-meal, sometimes you just want something a little…well…sweeter! For those occasions, here’s an easy and delicious quick bread that I’m sure any child would be happy to find waiting on the table after school. And hey, blueberries are healthy, right?

 

Blueberry-Lemon Bread

Adapted from Real Simple magazine

 

Makes 1 loaf

 

Ingredients:

3 cups all-purpose flour

1 cup sugar

4 teaspoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

4 tablespoons butter, chilled and cut into thin slices

1 1/2 cups blueberries

grated rind from 1 lemon (preferably organic since you are using the rind)

1 cup milk (skim is fine)

2 eggs beaten

 

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 350 and prepare a 9″x5″ loaf pan by spraying it lightly with cooking spray.

2. Combine flour and salt in a large bowl. Using your fingers or a pastry blender, work the butter into the flour until it resembles coarse crumbs.

3. Gently mix in the blueberries and lemon rind. Stir in the milk and eggs until well blended.

4. Pour into prepared loaf pan. Bake 55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center of the loaf comes out clean.

5. Removed loaf from pan and allow to cool on a wire rack.