Tag Archives: low carb recipes

Delicious Chorizo Egg Muffins for Cinco de Mayo

Happy Cinco de Mayo! No better way to celebrate this festive holiday than with a spicy Mexican style dish and that’s just what this little egg muffin is.  It’s a little late for breakfast today, but the party goes on all week.  Heck, we went to the Star Trek Experience at the Grand Sierra Hotel last Sunday (fabulous, by the way) and the parking lot was packed with people going to the Cinco de Mayo street fair set up in the side parking lot.  No doubt in my mind that it’s running through this weekend.  Besides you don’t need a holiday to spice up your breakfast and these egg muffins make a great lunch also.

Chorizo Egg Muffins

Slightly spicy, with vegetables in it. The kohlrabi is like adding potatoes to the mix and spinach and onion add to the taste and nutrition. The golden flax meal brings a bit of a taste of cornmeal with no carbs and extra fiber for a great breakfast start.

6 Eggs
1/4 cup Kohlrabi, cubed
1/4 cup Spinach, fresh, chopped
2 medium Scallions, sliced
4 oz. Texas Chorizo or Mexican Chorizo
1/4 cup Ricotta Cheese
1/4 teaspoon Pepper
1/4 teaspoon Salt
1/2 cup Sharp Cheddar Cheese
2 tablespoons Heavy Whipping Cream
3 tablespoons Golden Flax Meal

Heat oven to 365 degrees (F.) Spray 6 to 8 muffin wells or individual muffin cups with baking spray.

Cook kohlrabi in the microwave for a minute or in boiling water for two to three minutes until tender. Cool. Slice the cubes into smaller pieces.

In a bowl, break the eggs and beat with a whisk, then add the ricotta cheese and cream and whisk until mixed in. Add vegetables, chorizo, flax meal and seasoning and mix well. You may have to separate the chorizo into small pieces before adding if it is the more solid variety. If you use the Mexican chorizo, it has a chili sauce mixed into it and the egg muffins will have a redder color from it.

Use a 1/4 or 1/3 cup measure to scoop and pour the egg mixture into the muffin cups. They should be almost full. Top with shredded cheese. Bake for 30 minutes until they are golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the middle comes out cleanly.

Let cool for a few minutes before serving. May be refrigerated or frozen.

Makes 7 or 8 egg muffins

Nutrition Info per muffin
Calories: 212.8 Fat: 16.6 Net Carbs: 1.4 g Protein: 13.2

 

 

 

 

New Cookbook, New Series Launched

coverLC15-Mexican2_96

I’m excited to launch a new series of little cookbooks that I call Low Carb 15.  Simply, it is a little cookbook with fifteen recipes covering one subject or category with delicious adapted to low carb recipes.  Since it is almost Cinco de Mayo, I launched with one of my favorite food types — Mexican Food!

I love it and have had to come up with adapted recipes to help keep me in maintenance mode.  I sure don’t want to go back up in weight and it is a struggle all the time to not fall off the low carb path and indulge in some of the great food out there. Sure, I do fall off now and then, but I always try to snap back to the low carb intake. But it’s my mission to these days to try to adapt as many recipes for favorite foods to a low carb version.

This booklet has fifteen great recipes for tried and enjoyed Mexican and Tex-Mex food.  It includes two recipes for soup, two for desserts, one for a spicy cheesy cornbread made with low carb flours, and the rest are main course items.  A few of the recipes have been posted on this blog, but there are several new, never posted ones that are exclusive to this book.

The booklet is only available on eBook.  At the moment, it is available from Smashwords (see widget above) and Amazon Kindle. It will be available on iBooks, Barnes and Noble, and Kobe soon.

So check it out and treat yourself to a copy.  If you like it, please review it. Thanks.  And happy Cinco de Mayo!

Simple Cranberry Mustard Marinade Spices Pork

Pork roasts are a snap to cook and they are so good. They’re a lean piece of meat and very tender and they take well to marinades, rubs, and fruit coatings.  This marinade is a simple to put together spicy blend that adds a tang of chile with cranberry mustard to the flavor.    You can make it with Dijon mustard instead of cranberry mustard, but it loses that fruity tang.

Sometimes cranberry mustard is difficult to find at the grocery store.  I use Beaver brand and I order it online when I can’t find it locally.  It’s great on sandwiches, particularly ham or chicken ones.

Cranberry Mustard Marinated Pork Loin

1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 cup soy sauce
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 teaspoon chili flakes
2 tablespoons Cranberry mustard
salt and ground black pepper to taste
1 teaspoon Sugar Substitute
2 pounds pork tenderloin

In a bowl, add all ingredients except the pork and whisk together. Use a cooking fork or a sharp knife to pierce the pork roast in several places, which will allow the marinade to go into the meat better. Using a large resealable plastic bag, put in the pork and pour the marinade in. Seal the bag and massage the marinade to work the marinade into it. Place in the refrigerator to marinate for two to three hours.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees (F.).

Place the pork in a foil-lined baking dish and pour the marinade over the top. Bake for 45 to 60 minutes until a meat thermometer inserted to the middle of the roast reads 145 degrees.

Remove the roast and cover with foil to keep warm. It will continue to cook. Pour the pan juices into a small skillet or pot and cook over medium heat to reduce to a thicker gravy.

Serve with a tablespoon or two of gravy over the top.

Makes 6 servings.

 

Low Carb Spinach & Artichoke Cauli-Mac

A lot of yummy recipes are shared on Facebook, like this one recently posted from BuzzFeed for One-Pan Mac and Cheese. This is a delicious recipe with lots of cheese flavor and the subtle taste of the spinach and artichoke hearts just enhances it.

For me, I immediately start adapting it to a low carb version because I know that macaroni, or any pasta, is too high carb’d for my lifestyle unless I make the pasta myself from low carb flours. So far, I haven’t tried that although it’s on my to-do list.

But in this case, the easier change to the recipe is to replace the macaroni with cauliflower. If you like this vegetable, and I know some people who don’t, then it is an amazing replacement for many starches in your cooking. You can chop it and use it to replace smaller pastas. You can rice it or chop it finely in a food processor to use it as a fill-in for rice, couscous, and other small pastas. You can also use it for pizza crusts, bread sticks, and assorted other bread replacements.

As a replacement for macaroni, it is fantastic. It doesn’t have a strong flavor, particularly if you start with fresh cauliflower or use frozen that hasn’t defrosted and sat in the refrigerator for a couple of days. While this recipe is very close to the one posted, I never make anything exactly the way it’s written. In addition to the cauliflower for macaroni swap, I also added bacon, because I love bacon and this just called out for it. The artichoke hearts may be a little hard to find but you can get them either canned or frozen. If you can get frozen, those are better. Do not get marinated artichoke hearts unless they’re the only option you have. If you do, wash them thoroughly before using unless you want the taste of the marinade in your meal. While I didn’t add them this time, the next time I make this, I think adding chopped green onions would be awesome.

I also cut the recipe in half so two people don’t have too many leftovers, but you can easily double it if you want the larger dish. I used an 8″ cast iron skillet and it filled it to almost over-flowing so even the larger cast iron skillet might not be big enough for the full recipe. Also, if you are making this recipe with macaroni instead of cauliflower, use 1/2 the amount called for as macaroni expands as it cooks, so one cup dry equals two cups cooked.

Don’t like cauliflower? Try dicing turnips or kohlrabi into small cubes to fill in for the macaroni. After they are diced, cook them in boiling water or in a bowl in the microwave until a fork can easily pierce them. At this point, this resembles a scalloped potato recipe more than it does macaroni and cheese, but they are similar.

Skillet Spinach Artichoke Cauli-Mac

1 tablespoon Butter
1 clove Garlic minced
3 oz. Baby Spinach
1/2 cup Artichoke hearts, drained
1/2 pound Bacon, cooked and broken into pieces(optional)
3/4 cup Heavy Cream
1/4 cup Water
1 teaspoon Sea Salt
1 teaspoon Black Pepper, freshly ground
2 cups Cauliflower, chopped
1/2 cup Cheddar Cheese
1 1/2 cups Mozzarella Cheese

Preheat oven to 450 degrees (F.)

In an ovenproof 8″ skillet, such as a cast iron one, melt the butter, then add the garlic, spinach and artichoke hearts. Cook and stir until the spinach wilts. Add the cream, water, salt and pepper. Stir until the sauce is boiling. Add the bacon and cauliflower pieces and stir into the sauce. Cool until the sauce coats the cauliflower pieces. Add the cheddar and one cup of mozzarella to the pan and stir until it is completely melted.

Sprinkle the remaining mozzarella on top and bake for about seven minutes or until the cheese if bubbly and golden brown.

Makes 4 servings. nutrition_Cauli-mac-bacon-artichokes

Light and Fruity Ricotta Cookies

What says Spring better than a light, delicious and delicately-flavored cookie?  Drawing on early spring fruit like strawberries or lemon, you can add a special sweet taste to the cookie.  Other stand-bys, like lemon and orange extracts add the flavor without adding carbohydrates or calories.

Ricotta cookies are an Italian style cookie that are light and very tasty. I think the recipe works well with low carb flours, although they are more delicate than the full flour version. You can add a teaspoon of lemon juice to make them lemon cookies or a 1/2 teaspoon of strawberry extract to give them a strawberry flavor. For that matter, you can add a little chopped strawberries to the batter to make them a strawberry cookie. Prefer the taste of orange? Add 1/2 teaspoon orange extract and a little chopped orange to it. With fruits, you need to add the fruit sparingly, no more than 1/4 cup or you will begin to run the carbohydrates up quite a bit.

Ricotta Cheese Cookies

1cup Sugar Substitute
1/2 cup Butter, softened
7.5 ounces Ricotta Cheese
1 teaspoons Vanilla Extract
1 Egg
1 1/2 cups Low Carb Flour
1 tablespoons Baking Powder
1/2 teaspoon Salt

3/4 cups Confectioners’ Sugar Substitute
1 tablespoons Cream
1/2 tablespoon Water

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees (F.) Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or use a silicone mat.

In a large bowl, add the sugar substitute and butter and use a mixer on low speed to combine them before increasing the speed and beating until light and fluffy. Reduce speed and add in the ricotta, vanilla (or lemon, strawberry or orange) and egg.

Reduce the speed back to low and add the low carb flour, baking powder and salt. Mix on low until the dough forms. If you are adding any chopped fruit, stir it into the dough now.

Using a tablespoon, drop dough onto the prepared baking sheet. Leave about 2 inches between cookies. Bake for 12 to 15 minutes until the cookies are just golden brown around the edges. Let cool for about 10 minutes, then remove to a cooling rack to allow them to cool before icing.

For the icing, use a small bowl and add the confectioner’s sugar, cream and water.(If you’d like you can add a drop of flavoring extract to the icing. Stir until it makes a smooth glaze. Use a knife blade or a spreader to ice each cookie.

Makes 18 cookies.

Nutrition Information per cookie (vanilla):
Calories: 115 Fat: 9.8 g Net Carbs: 1.4 g Protein: 5.2 g

Using wheat flour and sugar per cookie:
Calories: 189.5 Fat: 7.6 g Net Carbs: 27 g Protein: 3.4 g