Salmon Patties on Pink Lentils

…with a garnish of bacon and a side of oven-roasted broccolini.  Oh, my!  What are we celebrating??

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LIFE!  And, protein!  Sometimes an ordinary day can be made special with a special meal.  This looks swanky, but is simple to make and surprisingly inexpensive.  Let’s get the lentils going and then start the salmon patties, er… “croquettes” if you want to sound fancy.

1 cup of pink lentils – sorted, debris removed – get them ready and set aside

1/2 cup chopped red onion

1/2 cup chopped sweet red pepper

Into a medium saucepan over medium heat, place the onion and red pepper.  Drizzle enough olive oil onto the veggies so they don’t stick and cook for 3-4 minutes.  Once the veggies are soft, add the pink lentils and 2 cups of chicken broth.  You may need more liquid later, but wait and see.  We want a nice, thick base for the salmon patties so the lentils do not need to be wet and soupy.  When the lentils come to a boil, reduce heat to simmer and place a lid on the pan.  Keep an eye on them, but let them go a little longer than usual – about 25 minutes.   Make sure you have enough liquid so the lentils don’t stick to the bottom.  Add either water or chicken broth, as needed, up to 1 more cup total.

For the salmon patties:

1 can salmon (15 oz), drained but not squeezed – just pour off extra liquid

1 Tbsp. spicy whole-grain mustard

3 Tbsp. minced onion

3 Tbsp. chopped fresh parsley

zest of one lemon

freshly ground black pepper

1 tsp. Old Bay seasoning

3-4 Tbsp. flour or finely ground oats – this will be more or less, depending on how much moisture is in mixture

2 eggs

Put everything except eggs into a bowl and mix together.  Add eggs and stir gently.  It should be moist and workable.  If it seems too wet, add some additional flour.  This is the most important part of making the patties.  If they are too wet, they will spread and break apart.  If they are too dry, they won’t adhere.  Once you get the salmon mixture *right*, heat a skillet to medium low.  You will need some fat (butter, olive oil, bacon drippings, coconut oil, whatEV)  Add enough fat to coat the bottom of the pan.  Using your hands and a spoon, scoop out and shape each patty, gently laying it in the hot oil.  Leave space between each, cooking 3 at a time to total 6 patties in two batches.

Hopefully, your lentils have softened up nicely in the meantime.  If they are too wet, take the lid off and let the extra liquid bubble off.  Stir and break them up to form a nice very-thick-soup-like consistency.

To serve:  spoon out about a half cup of pink lentils into a bowl.  Place 1-2 salmon patties artistically on one side.  Crumble 2 slices of  extra-crisp bacon in a small bowl and sprinkle on top.  (See: BACON post)  Place oven-roasted broccolini on the side (See:  Oven Roasted Veggies post) and you are there.

 

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Granola

Granola is a tricky one – oh, not the recipe.  That’s just easy.  Tricky is buying granola and thinking you are getting a good, “healthy” option.   If you make it yourself, you can use quality fats, good seed & nut options and just-the-perfect-amount-of sweetness and KNOW you are getting a good, healthy option.

Start with good oats.  I LOVE Bob’s Red Mill.  I love the company.  I love the man who gave the company back to his employees for his 81st birthday.  And, they are just the best oats I have ever had.  My preference is the thick rolled oats, but the regular rolled oats are fine, as well.

4 cups thick rolled oatsphoto 1 (24)

1 cup pecans, choppedphoto 4 (15)

1 cup (or more) pumpkin seedsphoto 3 (18)

1 cup sliced almondsphoto 5 (15)

1 cup coconut chips photo 1 (25)

Place all the dry ingredients into a large baking pan.  Stir them up!

We need some wet ingredients:

1/2 cup coconut oil

1/3 cup pure maple syrup (or more, to taste)

1 tsp. molasses

1 cup very hot water

Stir until the coconut oil and maple syrup melt and combine.

To this, add:

1 tsp. cinnamon.

1/2 tsp. cardamom

and just a pinch of pink Himalayan salt

Stir it all up and you will have a dark oh-so-heavenly liquid. photo 1 (27)

Pour this into your dry granola mixture and make sure everybody gets their fair share.  Stir and stir and stir.  Now, you must taste it.   It’s the only way to test for seasonings.  Remember you will add some sweetness with dried fruit after baking, but now is the time to tweak.  I like a mildly sweet granola, so if you need more, add it now!

Pre-heat your oven to 250 degrees and slide it in there for about 45 minutes.    Stir.  Continue cooking low and slow, stirring about every 15 minutes for another 45 minutes or until the granola is browned and dry.  As it gets closer to done, you may want to reduce your time between stir/checks to 5 minutes.  It will get perfect FAST.   One of my saddest days (in the kitchen) was getting impatient and turning on the broiler to speed up the browning process.  We couldn’t save it.  Burned granola… what a waste!  You will be rewarded for your patience!  Ah!  photo 2 (26) Now, if you are adding dried fruit, stir it in.  I used dried cranberries, about 1/2 cup.  You can really add any dried fruit, in any amount.  Mix it in, go crazy!  photo 3 (20)

Once your granola is completely cooled, store it in airtight containers.  Give some away, freeze extra.  You’ll be so glad you did!

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NOTE:  You can use any nut, seed or dried fruit.  If you like a nuttier granola – add more nuts.  Prefer a more oat-filled granola?   Up the rolled oats.  I usually add a little fresh grated nutmeg and it’s lovely in this recipe.  Follow your own likes and use what you have on hand.  I have 4 pecan trees so I always have pecans, but you can use walnuts or whatever you prefer!  It’s going to be granola-licious!

 

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