March 11, 2015

Peanut Butter Cookie Pie for Fun

Peanut Butter Cookie Pie | The Naptime Chef

What do you get when you combine flaky pie crust with your favorite cookie recipe? Peanut butter cookie pie, of course. This treat is a super-duper kid favorite recipe that is bound to be a family favorite for years to come. And if you really want to ensure its place in the dessert hall of fame make it into a giant peanut butter cookie pie overload sundae. You’ll be the most popular person in your house and bask in praise for days on end!

March 10, 2015

Green Beans with Frizzled Shallots

Green Beans with Shallots | The Naptime Chef

We are on the mend at Chez Naptime after last week’s kiddie virus invasion. I am still amazed at how many tissue boxes we went through! I am slowly getting back on the cooking wagon and am sticking to quick, easy meals that can be whipped up in a jiff. I even make them easier on myself with a little naptime food prep. So simple! These green beans with frizzled shallots have become a recent favorite of ours. We love the salty crunch of the shallots with the snappy beans.

March 3, 2015

Brown Eggs & Jam Jars with Aimée Wimbush-Bourque

Brown Eggs and Jam Jars Giveaway | The Naptime Chef

I’ve written about my friend Aimée before as she is the editor of Simple Bites, one of my favorite food blogs. Her recipes and tips are timeless and she is one of my most constant sources of inspiration. I should also mention that her incredibly organized refrigerator makes me weep with envy! Today I am writing about Aimée for the best reason – she wrote her first cookbook! Brown Eggs and Jam Jars: Family Recipes from The Kitchen of Simple Bites is a triumph of family food, gardening tips, and the warmth of Aimée’s hearth. I can’t say enough about it. Here is my little interview with Aimée and your chance to win your very own copy!

1) There are so many angles to this book and they all demonstrate your love for urban homesteading and how you grow a lot of your own food and feed your family. As you outlined this book how did you go about organizing the chapters and deciding what to include (kids in the kitchen, egg education, building garden beds, recipes, and more!) and how to include it? (ps­ thank you for all the jam jar hack ideas!)

The cookbook closely follows our day-­to­-day life, so it made sense to build the content around the seasons and events they bring. We eat and preserve food very seasonally, so that helped narrow down which recipe went where. I wanted each chapter to feel like a menu ­ with a beverage, a salad, a main, a dessert, etc, so that whittled down my options for recipes and brought a balance to the overall selection. The homesteading features were woven in to fit with the season, and the Kids Can sections were slotted in near the end of the books completion.

Brown Eggs and Jam Jars

2) The photography and styling of this book is so rich and inviting. After I finished it I felt like I had visited your home and met your family! How did you determine what would be photographed and how it would be presented? It was one of the homiest and warmly photographed cookbooks I’ve ever read.

Thank you! I wanted to achieve exactly what you have felt ­ that readers had joined us on our urban homestead, celebrating the joyous events that the seasons bring. So I really appreciate the feedback! My photographers wrote a ‘behind the scenes’ post about the photos in the book  that was really fun. I chose to work with them because of their unique approach to lifestyle photography. They are able to capture life as it happens, which was ideal for BEJJ, because I didn’t want to really ‘style’ our events. Gathering such as the Harvest Dinner or Jam Swap happened in the same way they do every year, only Tim and Angela were around to document them for the cookbook.

3) Canada plays a staring roll in this book. Can you tell us a little how Canadian cuisine differs from American and British food? You’ve really helped me see how it is a unique niche and your distinctly Canadian view deserves some attention.

Canadian cuisine is uniquely diverse because of the melting pot of cultures and the sheer expanse of the country. We eat close to the land and feast on an array of gorgeous produce, fine cheese, wild and domestic meats, and uniquely grown ingredients. I have lived nearly coast to coast and there are recipes in the book that reflect that history, from my Baba’s pickles to my take on classic Quebec Tourtiere. And of course there’s an entire chapter on maple syrup ­ it doesn’t get more Canadian than that! So many people are saying that the books feels decidedly Canadian and that makes me so happy.

4) Were there any “outtakes” we don’t see here? I always have to wonder if there was a wilting plant that wouldn’t stand up, or a child that upset the perfectly styled cookie plate at the last second. Those kind of things happen in my house all the time and often make for the best behind-­the­-scenes stories!

Oh plenty!! We worked with anywhere from 2-­5 kids around (mine plus the photographers), and there were countless upsets and re-­shoots.The hardest part was holding them back from diving into the food all the time, because it was always perfectly edible and ready-­to­-eat, not overly propped and styled! Clara’s picnic photo (the opening image for Chapter 3: Picnics) was a challenge and a half. She wouldn’t sit still, the wildflowers kept getting trampled so we had to move to a new area, and the food kept wilting in the sun. Oh and those yellow blooms only last about 5 days in spring, so there was no option for a re-shoot. Still, we got the shot!

Brown Eggs and Jam Jars 2

5) I’ve hear that there is another book in the works. Can you share a little tidbit about the theme and what we can expect?

You’re right! I’ve started working on a second cookbook, although the theme is still under wraps. Readers can expect it to feel like a natural sequel to Brown Eggs and Jam Jars, with 100 more family­-friendly recipes featuring natural ingredients. I’m once again working with Penguin Random House and photographer’s Tim and Angela Chin, so the new book will be every bit as beautiful as the first.

Thanks for stopping by, Aimée!

To enter to win a copy of Brown Eggs & Jam Jars:

1) Leave a comment sharing your favorite kind of dinner to share with your family!

2) Follow Simple Bites on Facebook and follow Kelsey Banfield on Facebook.

3) Contest runs from March 3rd through March 10th. Winner will be announced in the March 13th newsletter! Good luck!

February 24, 2015

Slow Cooker Chicken Parmesan Soup

Slow Cooker Chicken Parmesan Soup

Given that we’ve been slurping a heck of a lot of soup around here lately I thought I’d stop in with one more. I swear, promise (!), that this will be the last one for a while. Even I know it is time to break out of my soupy pattern. It has been so easy while the weather has been crapola, but now it is time to move on. But, before I do, I have to share this little gem I found on F00d52 the other day. It is called Chicken Parmesan Soup because it tastes exactly like a Chicken Parmesan casserole but it can be made with one-quarter of the effort and is a touch healthier.

February 19, 2015

Soup Season!

If there ever was a soup winter this is it. It is barely above 10 degrees F most days here. When we were in Cooperstown last weekend is what rarely above 0 and that is not an exaggeration! To stay warm and happy I’ve been making lots and lots of soup. I even plan to have another new soup recipe for you next week.

There are many reasons why soup makes a great winter meal including:

– Soups are a great way to pack lots of flavors into one bowl. Most soups contain at least one, if not more, vegetables, some beans, pasta, and even meat or poultry. Depending on what you want to make, soup can be a complete, nutritious one-bowl meal.

– Soups lend themselves well to batch cooking. Double whatever soup recipe you want to make and freeze half for later. Soup is always handy to have the freezer when there is no time to cook!

– Since soup recipes can be made up on a moment’s notice they are a great way to use up bits and bobs of whatever is in your fridge or pantry. It is no coincidence that there are so many ways to make soup. You can add almost anything to soup!

Soup ages well. If you make it in advance by naptime cooking, or even making it the day before you plan to eat it, the flavor of soup will only improve. Reheating it is a snap on the stovetop or in the microwave and it is always easy to serve hot.

Here are some of the favorite soups we’ve been enjoying this winter:

Slow Cooker Tortilla Soup | The Naptime Chef

Tomato Soups

Tomato Quinoa Soup

Slow-Cooker Tortilla Soup

Creamy Tomato Basil Soup & Basil Grilled Cheese – Food for My Family

Spicy Tomato Soup – Cheeky Kitchen

Tomato White Bean Soup – Dinner a Love Story

Mushroom Barley Soup | The Naptime Chef

Vegetable-Based Soups

Mushroom & Barley Soup

Caramelized Shallot Soup

Creamy Mushroom & Leek Soup with Croutons

Moroccan Red Lentil Soup with Chard – Feed Me Phoebe

Greens and Garlic Soup – Brooklyn Supper

Turkey Pho from Food52

(image via Food52)

Chicken & Turkey Soups

Chicken Sausage and Tortellini Soup

Sausage Bean & Pasta Soup – Simple Bites

Ina’s Italian Wedding Soup

The Best Chicken Soup You’ll Ever Have – Cup of Jo

Turkey Pho – Food52

Shrimp Soup | The Naptime Chef

Seafood Soups

Thai-Style Shrimp Soup

Cream of Scallop Soup – Orangette

Dad’s Fish Stew – Simple Recipes

Clam Chowder – Honest Food

February 18, 2015

French Toast Muffins & More

February 17, 2015

Pretty Votives for Your Table

Keeping the house bright this time of year can be hard. The light outside is so dull and the sun sets pretty early. To cheer up our table I like to light candles in little votive holders. It is an easy way to brighten our space and add a little extra warmth to our day. Here are a few of my favorites:

The Naptime Chef Favorite Tea Lights

via Food52, $42

The Naptime Chef Favorite Votives

via Terrain, $8 each

The Naptime Chef Favorite Votives

I love this festive design from Aimee of Simple Bites. You can use your own supply of jam jars to make them at home.

The Naptime Chef Favorite Votives

via Anthropologie, $7.95

Favorite Votive Holders | The Naptime Chef

via Simon Pearce, $80 per pair