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Apple Quinoa Salad

When September finally arrives with its overflowing bushel baskets of apples, I can hardly stop myself from adding them to…well…everything! Apples start showing up in neat slices next to my morning toast, they’re dipped in almond butter or sprinkled with cinnamon as a snack, they are diced with crunchy toasted almonds and thrown into salads at dinner, and they ceremoniously make their way into an apple crisp or a homemade apple pie on the first really chilly weekend of fall. If an apple a day keeps the doctor away, my family is going to be reeeeeally healthy this month! Given my love of all things apple (now that I seem to have outgrown my apple allergy – see post here), I’m always on the lookout for new and interesting ways to incorporate them into menus.

Here’s a recipe for a grain salad using protein-packed quinoa that is loaded with healthy mix-ins like apples, carrots, walnuts and dried cranberries. This makes a great vegetarian lunch or side dish at your fall dinner table. Enjoy it, in all it’s apple-y goodness.

 

Apple Quinoa Salad

 

Serves 6-8

 

Ingredients:

1 cup quinoa

2 cups water

2 tablespoons honey

1/4 cup lemon juice

1/2 teaspoon kosher salt

3 tablespoons olive oil

1 large granny smith apple (or other tart apple you prefer), diced

1 cup  diced carrots

1/3 cup dried cranberries

2 tablespoons chopped parsley

1/2 cup coarsely chopped walnuts, toasted

salt & pepper

 

Directions:

1. Combine the quinoa and water in a medium saucepan. Bring to a boil and reduce heat. Simmer covered until all the liquid is absorbed, about 15 minutes. Transfer the quinoa to a large bowl, stir and let cool completely.

2. Whisk together the honey, lemon juice, and salt. Slowly whisk in the oil until well blended.

3. Once the quinoa is completely cool, add the apple, carrots, dried cranberries, parsley, and walnuts. Toss well. Add the dresssing and toss gently to coat the salad. Taste and season with salt and pepper as needed. Serve at room temperature.

Nut Free Shouldn’t Mean Nutrient Free

Note: This is a guest post by Dr. Stefanie Stevenson, an Integrative Physician who sees patients in Montgomery, OH. Dr. Stevenson has a special passion for the healthfulness of food served to children in schools. She is actively involved with The Sycamore Wellness Community, a Facebook group that provides information about good nutrition for children.  You can learn more about Dr. Stevenson’s services here.

 

All three of my kids started school last week, which means myhomework began as well!  After leafing through the four million forms  I needed to fill out, I came across a suggestion list for nut-free snacks.  It seems every year there is a child with severe food allergies in each of my children’s classrooms.  It is really not surprising since the incidence of food allergies has exploded in the last decade.  What I do find surprising is that many of the suggestions often provided for “safe” nut-free snacks are the very foods that may be playing a role in this explosion of food allergies.  This year I was really pleased that the list from my school offered healthy, natural choices. Too often, suggested nut-free snacks from various schools, parents, or coaches include items like:

Fruit Rollups/Fruit Snacks

Cheez-Its

Rice Kripsie Treats

Fritos

Sun Chips

Vanilla Wafers

Teddy Grahams

Many of these foods include ingredients  like soybean oil, genetically modified foods, partially hydrogenated fats, and high fructose corn syrup, all of which are indicators of poor quality foods.  Why do we think that nut free foods have to be nutrient free as well?

 

Instead, some easy ideas for safe and healthy nut free snacks include  fruits and vegetables, low fat dairy, and whole grains.  I often send in snacks like:

Fresh Strawberries

Mandarin oranges

Apple (whole or cut up with cinnamon)

Applesauce

Carrot sticks, cucumber slices, jicama matchsticks, or red pepper strips

Dried raisins, cherries, or mangoes

Air popped popcorn

A handful or two of low sugar breakfast cereal (i.e. Cheerios, Kashi Heart to Heart)

Triscuits or Ryvita crackers

Low fat mozzarella cheese stick

Pumpkin or Sunflower seeds

The snack you send for your child simply needs to carry them through for an hour or two until they get to lunch or until school is dismissed. It should be an added source of nutrients in their morning or afternoon to give them good quality energy for the next part of their day. I hope the suggestions I’ve included here will help you set them up for a successful, energy-filled school day!

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.