Easy summer grilling

As the end of school draws near, everyone I know feels frazzled and rushed. Mealtimes, even for an avid and enthused cook like me, feel like little more than yet another to do. As such, my love affair with our grill has rekindled to a mighty degree, as it does each May, and I am reminded that grilling is really a tremendously simply, tasty way to enjoy dinner and reclaim a heck of a lot of time from its prep.

Last week, I had the pleasure of speaking to Andrea Donsky, nutritionist and part of the impressive Naturally Savvy team, a website dedicated to more natural, organic eating. She's also written the book, Unjunk Your Junk Food: Healthy Alternatives to Conventional Snacks, and is an enthusiastic spokesperson for Applegate Natural and Organic Meats

I wanted to talk to her about hot dogs, a food my children and husband love but which I hold at arm's length. I don't recall ever enjoying hot dogs, although corn dogs smothered in mustard were a youthful favorite. I happen to only buy Applegate's Great Organic Beef Hot Dog's for my family because they're antibiotic- and hormone-free and made with 100% grassfed beef which is important to me from both an animal welfare (cows were meant to eat grass, not corn and grain) and human health standpoint. Antibiotic overuse is rampant in the States and is responsible for a huge degree of the scary antibiotic-resistant bacteria that make so many folks sick. 

But, is any hot dog healthy? It seemed a good question to ask as summertime kicks in and our grill will be fired up on the regular. 

Not only are Applegate's dogs antibiotic- and hormone-free, they are also lower in fat than most brands (8 grams per dog compared to an average of 15 grams per link found in most brands), contain no fillers and are lower in sodium than other brands. Applegate also offers tasty chicken and turkey hot dogs if you want variety, prefer those flavors, or want to avoid red meat all together. 

I serve my boys' hot dogs on whole grain buns which, not surprisingly, Andrea endorses, and I use organic, low-sugar ketchup which is devoid of the high-fructose corn syrup found in most ketchup brands on the market. Andrea suggests wrapping your dogs in cabbage or lettuce leaves if you want to avoid carbs, but we are a carb-loving family so plan to stick with whole grain buns.

All in all, I do feel better about the health aspects of the dogs I'll be grilling my boys this summer. Slice a few steam vents in the top before grilling, and don't let the dogs burn as char can contain carcinogenic material. Grilling a hot dog takes about three minutes, and with some fresh watermelon or berries, and boiled corn on the cob, tossed salad, or steamed edamame (also about three minutes each to prep), you've got a healthy summer dinner lickety-split.

Other favorite grill-based meals include pizza loaded up with summer veggies; 
grilled hamburgers (regular beef, turkey, these delicious chicken ones, or my kofta variety);
salmon burgers which are easy and sublime;
and grilled vegetables of all stripes - eggplant, zucchini, sweet onions, yellow squash...

Mental floss

Today has been just what I needed! I dropped the bubs at camp, finished up the strawberry-Pinot Noir jam, went to the Container Store to GET.ORGANIZED., saw another bestie (who, by the way, was rendered speechless by a slice of the plum tart; see, it's not just me!), threw out a lot of random biz that my child hoarders had confiscated, returned emails in a thoughtful and responsible manner, picked the boys up, went for a Pokemon card treat and to the market, and then we all got happy about Lazy Thursday which is always what we do after Ludicrous Wednesday. Additionally and per my promise yesterday, I: read the paper, finished unpacking from Richmond and did not answer the inevitable call from CVS. Solid! While the boys zoned out with the iPad, I made fresh kofta burgers for their dinner, steamed some wax beans and chopped some watermelon too and then while they ate, tried to recreate a glorious lima bean hummus I devoured while in Wrightsville Beach.

www.em-i-lis.com

This smooth spread was to die for, and I think that'd be the case even if I weren't such a complete lima bean lover. I am pretty darn satisfied with this result and will post the recipe shortly in Dips et al. The limas are generously supported by tahini, lemon juice and cumin; that blend is further buttressed by garlic, salt, lemon thyme and lemon zest.

The hummus I had in NC, made by a company called Roots if I remember properly, was a real puree; I've left this chunkier for now because I want to try and make falafel-like patties with it for dinner tonight. The rest I'll process until very smooth which makes a luscious dip as well as a sandwich spread that adds serious oomph to the rest of your fixings.

www.em-i-lis.com

In my opinion, legumes are the cat's meow and you should all be better friends with them. Off to make -hopefully with better luck than I normally have attempting to fry falafel- the lima patties. Yee-howdy!