Hearty Eggs Benedict

Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox

Despite my immediate desire to eat chocolate in the morning, I tend to feel better if I eat a real breakfast (go figure). As a kid I was a no-breakfast type, preferring a cup of hot chocolate and nothing else. But my dad always ensured I ate something of breakfast-- grapefruit, toast with almond butter, cereal, and on the special days oven roasted hash browns or even Eggs Benedict. 

Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox
Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox

Now I love eggs for breakfast, and Eggs Benedict feels like a holiday to me because you have to get more than one pot dirty to make it, but it's always worth it. This particular Eggs Benedict recipes includes more than just Hollandaise sauce: with a bed of hash browns and a layer of lox, it's pretty hearty, in the best of ways. 

Just got home from a really long trip? Make this. 

Finished a tough work out? This. 

It's Saturday and you just need some time to yourself after the work week? Yup. 

Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox
Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox
Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox

Hearty Eggs Benedict

Primal, Gluten-Free, Grain-Free    |       

Served over hash and lox, a poached egg is dressed with hollandaise sauce.

Serves: 2   |    Total Time:



Ingredients:

  • 2 egg yolks
  • Juice from 1/2 lemon
  • 4 tablespoons butter, melted
  • Dash cayenne
  • Dash salt
  • Parsley, for garnish
  • Pepper, to taste
  • 2 eggs, poached or fried
  • Hash browns of choice
  • 2 servings lox

Directions:

  1. Before making the sauce, prepare your hash browns to your liking, and cook your eggs (I prefer to leave the yolks runny).
  2. Whisk together egg yolks with lemon until they become slightly lighter yellow. Place in small pot and heat over low, whisking continuously (or in a double boiler if you have one). After 3 minutes, pour in melted butter continuing to whisk the entire time. Continue to whisk until sauce thickens. Remove from heat. Add a dash of cayenne and salt to taste.
  3. Serve: Make a layer of hash brown on each plate, and top with lox. Then place a fried or poached egg on top, before drizzling with sauce. Top with parsley leaves for garnish, a sprinkle of pepper and/or more cayenne to taste. Serve immediately.

Cumin Lime Shrimp

Cumin Lime Shrimp
Cumin Lime Shrimp

This blog has come a looooong way since it’s beginning days, when I would post just whatever we were eating that day. Cumin Lime Shrimp was one of the first recipes I posted, and was just that — what we were eating that day. Now, I make sure the recipes makes sense for someone to actually include in their life. Quick to make; delicious; thoughtfully curated. So, I needed to revisit this post.

The original called for a marinade. Marinades are GREAT but I rarely plan enough to make a full-day marinade work. Even remember to pull something from the freezer to thaw in the mornings is hit or miss. Maybe I had more patience back in 2016. Or maybe as I’ve grow older I’ve become more busy. Probably both. Either way, the result is a need for more quick meals, even when I plan meals ahead for the week.

Cumin Lime Shrimp
Cumin Lime Shrimp

SO, in the new version of this recipe, you simply do everything at once, and hallelujah, shrimp cook in just a few minutes so dinner is hot on the table faster than you can get through an episode of your favorite background Netflix show.

Because the shrimp do cook fast, I recommend prepping whatever else you plan on eating for that meal before you start on the shrimp — maybe warm some tortillas, and prep a slaw, and slice avocado for quick tacos. Maybe make a salad. Just do the shrimp last so that they’re warm when you go to eat.

Cumin Lime Shrimp

Published August 2, 2016 by

Serves: 4   |    Active Time: 15 minutes



Ingredients:

  • 1/2 pound shrimp, raw deveined and shelled
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1/4 teaspoon paprika, ground
  • 1/2 teaspoon cumin, ground
  • Pinch of salt
  • Dash of freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 tablespoon coconut oil
  • 1/4 cup lime juice
  • 1/4 cup cilantro, minced

  • Directions:

    1. In a bowl, combine shrimp, garlic, paprika, cumin, salt, and pepper. Toss to coat shrimp.
    2. Heat coconut oil over medium-high heat. Tilt pan to coat in oil.
    3. When oil is glistening, place shrimp in pan. Do not over crowd pan — work in batches if needed. Cook shrimp for 1 minute undisturbed on first side. When shrimp begin to turn pink, flip them to the second side and cook for 1 more minute. Move cooked shrimp to a bowl, and repeat until all shrimp are cooked.
    4. Pour lime juice into skillet, and use a wooden spatula to scrape and bits from the bottom of the pan. Place coked shrimp back in pan and stir.
    5. Sprinkle shrimp with cilantro and serve hot as desired.

    Vanilla-Honey Tapioca Pudding

    Vanilla-Honey Tapioca Pudding

    When people hear that I grew up as an only child, they often ask I if you liked it. They as if I know any different – or have any perspective on what it's like compared to having siblings. I want to answer--I want to have an answer- but I do not. Instead, it was just me, and as an introvert, that never bothered me much. I certainly never had to compete for the last pudding cup, which my mom would often keep in the fridge (always tapioca). 

    Vanilla-Honey Tapioca Pudding
    Vanilla-Honey Tapioca Pudding

    Tapioca pudding is ridiculously easy to make. No joke, it's as easy as soak, simmer, set. Serve it with fresh berries in summer, or even a touch of homemade cranberry sauce in winter. Vanilla-Honey Tapioca Pudding!

    Vanilla-Honey Tapioca Pudding

    Primal, Gluten-Free, Grain-Free,    |       

    Tapioca is naturally grain-free, made form tapioca root. Use small tapioca pearls to make this pudding.

    Serves: 4   |    Total Active Time:



    Ingredients:

    • 2 1/2 cups whole milk
    • 1/2 cup heavy cream
    • ⅛ teaspoon salt (or 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt)
    • 1/2 cup small pearl tapioca
    • 1/2 cup honey (or 1/2 cup sugar, depending on preferences -- honey will lend a honey taste to the pudding)
    • 2 eggs
    • 1 teaspoon vanilla

    Directions:

    1. Put the milk, cream, and tapioca pearls in a medium sized sauce pan. Allow to sit for 30 minutes for quick cooking -- or overnight (covered, in the fridge) for normal tapioca, to hydrate.
    2. Place sauce pan on stove over medium-low heat. Add honey, and stir. Warm slowly until the milk is almost to a simmer, stirring frequently to avoiding tapioca sticking to the bottom, and cook until tapioca is fully hydrated (this will vary depending on type of tapioca -- quick cooking tapioca will only need 5 minutes, while regular could take up to 45).
    3. Meanwhile, whisk the eggs in a medium sized mixing bowl. Set aside. When tapioca is hydrated, use a ladel to scoop a ladel of warm milk mixture into the egg, whisking quickly to temper eggs. Then, pour eggs into sauce pan, again stiring quickly to avoid curdling. Cook for 3-5 minutes more, until mixture thickens. Pudding should coat the back of your spoon. Remove from heat, and stir in vanilla. Pour into airtight container and cool in fridge 2 hours or until ready to server.
    4. Divide the pudding among glasses and top with fresh berries, nuts, or marmelade.

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