Category Archives: Cooking

Recipes, restaurants, ingredients, shopping

Cookbook review (Giveaway closed): The Complete Month of Meals Collection

The winner of the giveaway is comment #5–Melanie! Congrats! Thanks everyone for participating!

I recently received a copy of The Complete Month of Meals Collection to review. I was especially pumped to review it because I’m able to offer a giveaway to one of YOU! And I love doing that. (to skip to that part, just leave a comment on this post and you’ll be entered!)

Here’s the skinny: it’s a diabetes-friendly and family-friendly cookbook. It has that classic (à la Betty Crocker) spiral bound thing going on–and the recipes inside also reminded me of Betty Crocker, slightly updated.

Which I don’t mean as a negative thing–we keep our Betty handy and reference her frequently. She has very handy diagrams of cow parts. Most recently, I whipped Betty out to make our yearly Christmas Angel Food Cake. So I’m not hating on Betty. However, if you’re looking for innovative recipes with a more global or cutting-edge feel, this cookbook is probably not the one.

And if you’re looking to curl up in bed with a cookbook and read all night about the author’s life story and why making meatballs by hand is her therapy, this is also not the one–it gets straight to the point, so no extra reading is within its pages.

However, if you want to make classic Betty-type recipes like Cucumbers with Dill Dressing, Potato Salad, Smothered Chicken or Broccoli Corn Chowder, it is the one. Or this very interesting-looking raisin bread, mmm.

What might you find in its pages? Think traditional American fare (and Americanized international-inspired fare), like stuffed peppers, but revamped to be healthier, with ingredient substitutions and so forth.

And there are numbers. Lots of nutritional numbers. So if you care about things like saturated fats, carbs, sodium, cholesterol and the like, you’re in luck! This book has got you covered.

The coolest feature is that it has this funky split-page section that I’ve never seen before in a cookbook. I’ll show you:

Basically, for all you calorie counters out there, it enables you to mix-and-match recipes in order to plan three meals in a day and see very quickly what your calorie count is between all of them.

There are pretty much no pictures (cue sad face), except to headline the various sections, but the pages have that nice, glossy Betty feel to them.

Also, the Seafood Gumbo looks delish.

One of my complaints is that it has no introductory statement about its recipes. So I’m leafing through a section on Dressings, Salsas and Sauces, see a recipe called “Mastokhiar,” and I have no idea what it is. I see the ingredients. I see the instructions, but . . . what is it, please? And do I serve it with chips?

My other complaint is that the ingredients that make it diabetes-friendly are presented with no alternative. For example, I’m seeing “1/4 cup egg substitute” in an ingredient list. What if I’m making this for a non-diabetic, like myself? I’d like to know if that equates to one egg, or what. I’m guessing the answer is two eggs? Ish? Still, it would be nice if it listed options.

Positive things: the recipes, overall, are easy. The ingredient lists are low-maintenance–there’s nothing I saw you’d have trouble finding at your regular old grocery store. And there’s a cool introduction with tons of information about what foods to seek out and what foods to avoid (and why). This intro includes lots of coo lists–Diabetes Superfoods (mmm–citrus fruits!), starchy versus non-starchy vegetables, foods that contain healthy fats, a seafood guide (“Best Choices” versus “Good Choices” versus “Choices to Avoid”), etc. This was my favorite part of the cookbook.

If you’d like to sample a couple recipes, these links will take you to printer-friendly versions of two that caught my eye:

Spanish Omelet

Chicken Kale Meatballs

If you think this cookbook might fit nicely into your cooking habits (or your friend’s, or your friend’s mother’s cousin’s ex), or help you (or any other of those people) create new ones, then you’ve come to the right place! Because I get to give one away.

To enter the giveaway, just leave a comment below (anything! Like, “Snurgh.” Or, “Bikini.”) before 9am on Monday January 15th. I’ll use the random number generator to choose a winner, and the cookbook will zoom your way.

And if you want to purchase it, here’s a link to the oh-so-convenient Amazon.

Good luck!




Cookbook (giveaway closed): Designed for One! (Diabetes-friendly)

(TO ENTER GIVEAWAY, JUST LEAVE A COMMENT ON THIS POST BY 9am Central, Thursday 12/21)

Giveaway closed: winner announced–commenter #2–congratulations Tammy!

D41

All images and recipes in this post: ©2017 by the American Diabetes Association. Designed for One is available at ShopDiabetes.org, in bookstores nationwide, or by calling 1-800-232-6733. Food Photography: Mittera

Hiya hello, all y’all. I recently agreed to take a look at a newly-released cookbook called Designed for One! – 120 Diabetes-Friendly Dishes Just for You.

You may be asking, now why in the heck would you be interested in cooking for one? Last I recall you were popping babbies out right and left?

(that’s right–babbies)

Well. See, every now and then, on the rare occasion when I’m alone, cooking can be zen. Therapeutic-ky. Especially when it involves simple salads (which my kids are not capable of eating and/or will not eat) or avocado toast (does that count as cooking?). Anyway, I like the idea of being indulgent in that way–towards myself. Cooking a meal just to please me? Wow. Yes. (Now I just have to arrange to be alone for a night. Hmm. Maybe next decade.)

You also may be thinking, but you don’t have diabetes!

Maybe not. However, it’s clear that you don’t have to have diabetes to like the sound of Sweet Hot Chicken Thighs. Or the Chunky Mango Gelato from the healthier desserts section. Or the Knife-and-Fork Turkey-Corn Tortillas (just click for the printable recipe).

Tortillas

Here’s the deal (i.e. my unfettered opinion) on the cookbook:

+ There are mushrooms on the cover. Okay, I’ll admit this was a huge part of the initial draw for me. I LOVE MUSHROOMS. They’re a fungus, so yay! I know, that sentence makes no sense. But that sentence does segue us into one of the coolest things I learned from this cookbook, which is why my mushrooms get slimy. Apparently I shouldn’t store them in plastic! Huh. The writer recommends paper bags. Noted! (And thank you. I hate slimy mushrooms. They’re a real downer.)

+ Each recipe includes complete nutritional information (calories, calories from fat, cholesterol, sodium, etc.). Like, I’ve never seen so much nutritional information together on one recipe. So way to go, author Nancy Hughes, for doing a hella-lotta math. (Like that? ‘Hella-lotta’? Yeah, me too.)

– There aren’t a lot of pictures in the cookbook itself, so if you’re a super visual person, this may not be for you. But the pictures it does include are lovely!

– / + There aren’t long stories to go with each recipe. For someone like my husband who views recipes as a functional part of his life, this is perfect. For someone like me (used to reading the personal musings of Nigella Lawson who accompanies every recipe with a lavish paragraph or three), well, I could’ve used some more musings from the author about why they named their third dog Willison and why the game Parcheesi is called Parcheesi.

+ / – The recipes themselves are quite simple. I’m imagining that would make this book good for a novice cook or someone who simply doesn’t like to cook so much but feels they need to do it for budgetary or health reasons. This would not be the right book for your accomplished chef friend who trained in Italy and interned at El Bulli.

In conclusion: I would describe this cookbook as functional, not lavish.

I am personally drawn to this recipe for Slow-Cooker Chuck and Veggies (click for the printable recipe).

Chuck

Very drawn.

Very, very drawn.

Probably because of the mushrooms. Again.

Anyway, if you think you might like this cookbook or you have a friend you might want to gift it to, guess what? I’m giving one away! WHOOOPDEEDOOOO! Do you know how long it’s been since I’ve done a giveaway on this blog?

(don’t answer that question)

So! Leave a comment below. On Thursday December 21st, after 9am Central, I’ll use the random number generator to pick a comment, and whoever left it gets the cookbook shipped to them for free, badabing badaboom.

Please feel free to share this post with any friend you think might need this cookbook in their lives. And of course, you can always purchase it for yourselves or said friend on the Provider-Of-All-Things Online Emporium that is Amazon.com.

Good luck and I’ll announce the winner on Thursday!