January 28, 2012

Babble Weekly Round-Up

January 27, 2012

Eight Hot Family Breakfasts to Keep You Warm This Winter! {Naptime Simple Tips}

As evidenced by the extensive family breakfast recipe list I’ve accumulated we take breakfast very seriously in this house. I got this from my parents, we always ate big breakfasts each morning growing up. My mother, a teacher, rightfully acknowledged that a healthy breakfast is a great way for both children and adults to start the day. I’ve carried on this tradition with my daughter, we eat breakfast together every morning. Of course, just because we consider breakfast a necessity – we all wake up with growling tummies – it doesn’t mean it has to be boring or difficult to make. Here are eight of our favorite hot breakfasts. I make a lot of these after my daughter is asleep. Or, they are classic powernap recipes and come together in a moment’s notice. Here is to wishing you a warm, cozy winter morning full of hot breakfasts!

French Toast

1. Overnight Slow-Cooker Vanilla Bean & Almond French Toast: This super simple recipes is perfect for feeding a crowd and doesn’t require any baking in the morning. Be a bedtime chef, flip the switch before you go to bed and wake up to a hot breakfast ready to go!

Vegetable Pie

2. Vegetable Pie: This protein packed pie is a gorgeous winter breakfast that can filled up with nearly any kind of vegetable you have on hand. Bake it up for a Sunday brunch and save any leftovers for dinner!

Sticky Buns

3. Easy Sticky Buns; These quick buns are so much fun to make and are perfect served up cold morning. They can easily be prepped the night before and baked up fresh.

Breakfast Sandwich

4. Double Egg-n-Bacon Sandwich: This awesome, greasy sandwich is ideal when you need a filling breakfast to power you through a busy morning. The ultimate powernap recipe, it comes together in minutes and gets the day off to a great start.

Heart Shaped Waffles

5. Cinnamon-Blueberry Waffles: Homemade waffles are the key to my daughter’s heart. I always have the dry mix stocked in the pantry so I can whip them up on demand.

Steel Cut Oats

6. Cinnamon-Sugar Strawberry Steel Cut Oat Loaf: My current favorite healthy hot breakfast, this hearty loaf cooks overnight and is ready first thing. Cut out a slice each day to warm up and enjoy first thing!

Cranberry Muffins

7. Whole Wheat Cranberry Spice Oat Muffins: These healthy muffins are a terrific winter bite, especially since apples are still available in the northeast. We often pack these in our bags if we need breakfast on the go, or for a mid-morning snack.

Cinnamon Rolls

8. Chocolate Chip Cinnamon Rolls with Vanilla Bean Glaze:  These rolls are undeniably decadent which makes them perfect for an occasional winter treat. We find them particularly rewarding on Friday mornings, our little reward for getting through the week!

January 27, 2012

Baking Big Game Cheese Dip on Connecticut Style, WTNH {Naptime Television}

The Naptime Chef: wtnh.com

I had such a fun time on Connecticut Style this week. I hope you enjoy this clip!

January 26, 2012

Cinnamon-Sugar Strawberry Steel Cut Oat Loaf {Naptime Everyday}

Steel Cut Oats Loaf | The Naptime Chef

What’s Going on Today: Typical crazy day at home followed by sledding after school!

Naptime Goals: Meetings and catching up on writing, slow cooker lasagna already simmering away for dinner.

Tonight’s Menu: Lasagna, Salad and Wine. After the kiddo goes to sleep prep breakfast tomorrow!

Until recently my daughter would finish her substantial plate of cinnamon waffles while I was still clutching hot tea and waiting for my oatmeal to cook. I’ve recently remedied this problem by preparing my steel cut oats in the slow-cooker the night before after my daughter was asleep, enabling us to eat breakfast together every morning. Prepping steel cut oats in the slow cooker overnight is an extremely popular winter breakfast, but I hadn’t tried it myself until this month. Once I realized how well the method works I started doing it weekly, piling in the oats after bedtime and digging into my hot cereal alongside my daughter the next morning. The leftovers of each batch were stored in a loaf pan so all week I could cut out a big slice and warm it up in an instant each morning.

January 25, 2012

Georgia Pellegrini, Girl Hunter & Book Giveaway! {Tales from the Trenches}

Girl Hunter Cover

Today I am chatting with my friend Georgia Pellegrini about her new book, Girl Hunter: Revolutionizing the Way We Eat, One Hunt at a Time. I read this book in two days flat and loved every second of it. It is all about chef and author Georgia’s personal journey to learn about the origins of her food and ultimately solve her own ominvore’s dilemma. This message resonated with me because where I grew up in Cooperstown, New York many of the families I knew hunted all fall to feed their families all winter. It was not about sport and reckless killing, it was about feeding a family responsibly and inexpensively, as well as respecting the wildlife in the area. Families depended, and still do, on hunting to put food on the table. I am so excited that Georgia is here today to share her story. To win a copy of her book see below!

1. Girl Hunter is about much more than hunting, it is about your coming to terms with your own views on eating meat and preserving wildlife. You say “I’m an omnivore who has solved my dilemma.” Can you elaborate on your hunting and eating mantra?

It is based off of my belief that we are all natural omnivores, regardless of the food choices we make. Our dilemma, which scientist Paul Rozin wrote about in 1976, and which writer Michael Pollan made accessible, is what we should have for dinner when we have so many food choices. The dilemma is even more important today because our industrial food system is so contaminated with corn, and hormones, and sick animals, that we humans are faced with the dilemma of what to eat so as not to get sick. My personal solution is hunting and gathering. When done ethically, this is the last natural and instinctive interplay between humans, the land, and animals. Hunting is an act involving all of the senses and I believe one of the most natural ways of being human on this planet. It is part of the natural cycle of life, humans eat animals and plants, animals eat animals and plants, plants feed from the dirt, and we turn to dirt. I think that is the part people have a hard time with—where there is the flow of life there is also the flow of death, and they have to acknowledge their own mortality.

January 24, 2012

Banana Bread with Cinnamon Pecan Streusel {Naptime Webisode}

This is the latest installment of my Powernap column. The series where I share quick, easy food that can be made for all kinds of situations. Powernaps are short and sweet, and so are these recipes. These are the things I make in a jiffy when I need a quick snack, am in the mood for a recipe experiment, or simply need to clean out the pantry.

Last week I noticed my stash of frozen bananas had grown a little too large. I always have at least three in there for emergency banana bread, but during the holidays I didn’t bake any so the pile had grown to nine. We were in need of some fresh snack food so this was perfect timing. Underneath the bananas I also found the last of the pecans I’d use to make Spiced Pecan Snowballs for Christmas. With these two things in hand, and an hour until school let out, I decided to whip up a fresh loaf of banana and top it with a crunchy pecan streusel. I had never topped banana bread with anything before, but there is a first time for everything, right?

January 22, 2012

Slow Cooker Winner!

Congratulations to Amanda Jasinski, the winner of the Breville Slow Cooker for the Slow Cooker Challenge!