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My original plan was for turkey sausage with BBQ beans and sauerkraut. Since I have been trying to cut out some carbs throughout the day, John and our daughter had the BBQ beans and I made some coleslaw to accompany my turkey sausage and sauerkraut.
After hearing on a food program that the best sauerkraut is in a can, I searched on line to find out how to enhance the canned sauerkraut. This is the recipe I use – https://www.loavesanddishes.net/how-to-cook-canned-sauerkraut/ The apple gives a sweet flavor pop and the caraway seeds are a must.
Here is the recipe for my coleslaw. It is for quite a bit of cabbage. I usually make it using a bag of shredded cabbage and 1/2 of all the rest of the ingredients.
Cole Slaw
2 lbs. cabbage, shredded
3 medium carrots, shredded
½ cup chopped parsley
1/4 large onion cut in narrow strips
Dressing
1 cup light mayo ( I usually cut the light mayo 50/50 with non-fat Greek yogurt.
2T Dijon mustard
2T cider vinegar
1 teaspoon celery seed
Salt and pepper and some optional sugar if you like your coleslaw sweet
Mix together dressing ingredients. Stir dressing into cabbage, onions, carrot, and parsley.
Having scallops for dinner always seems like a special occasion. In fact we opened a nice bottle of Chardonnay to drink with it. Due to the wine drinking, I decided to forego the new potatoes and make myself a double vegetable plate. John and our daughter went with the original concept.

Since he was cooking 15 scallops John seared them on a flat top grill pan. Normally he uses a frying pan when it is just the two of us. The grill got a little hotter than the pan does and so the scallops are a little darker and firmer than usual but still very tasty.
I cut the broccoli into larger pieces than I usually do so I could cook the beans and the broccoli together without the broccoli getting overcooked. Since three of us were eating, I added a tablespoon of butter and a little water to cook the vegetables.
The tartar sauce is a recipe that I asked for and received from the Fish Market, a seafood restaurant out here on the West Coast. We have always loved their tartar sauce. The secret is yellow mustard. They only gave me the ingredients, not the amounts of each ingredient. So the recipe below is my approximation.


What?! Mexican chicken parmesan? It’s not a long story. I looked in my pantry shortly before dinner and there were no canned tomatoes. Zero. What I did have was a container of salsa in the refrigerator and some tomato paste. Thus, Mexican chicken parmesan was created.

The sauce turned out to be somewhat spicy since the salsa was medium spiciness. I tamed it down with the tomato paste, a Roma tomato that our daughter had gleaned from her communal gardening spot, and a little bit of ketchup. I also added garlic and oregano to try to force the sauce into a more Italian vibe. We used Costco cooked rotisserie chicken breast pieces and a slice of Swiss cheese to mimic the “parmesan” part. And John actually grated some parmesan over his pieces.
I salted the zucchini slices and let them sit for an hour to draw some of the water out. They were sauteed with some cut up leek and garlic.
It all turned out pretty yummy. But I think that next time I will check the pantry before I put Chicken Parmesan on the menu.


Happy Pasta Day! Whole grain penne is our current go-to pasta and broccoli is the all-season vegetable. This yummy vegan entree takes less than a half an hour from slicing the first mushroom to ladling it into your bowl.
A little oil or oil spray goes in a pan while the water heats for the pasta in another pot. Add the mushrooms first followed by onions, garlic, red pepper flakes, oregano, and broccoli stem pieces. Add a little pasta water if the mixture is too dry.
When the pasta is cooked, reserve a cup of the pasta water, and drain the penne. Add the broccoli florets to your mushroom mixture and put the hot penne on top. Add one half cup or so of pasta water and stir the mixture around over medium high heat for a minute or so. Add a little olive oil and ladle the pasta into bowls.
Mangia!


I first had this dish at a restaurant called Khyber Pass. I found a recipe for it on a site that specialized in Indian/ Afghani food under the title of Afghani dal. It is easy, quick-cooking and delicious.
Don’t be fooled by “red” lentils. First of all they are coral colored and turn yellow when you cook them. They are very quick cooking and turn creamy unlike their brown cousins.
I served the lentils over a bed of raw rainbow kale and a 50/50 mix of white rice and cauliflower rice. I also added an optional dollop of plain yogurt and a squirt of sriracha.
Afghani dal
2 tsp. olive oil
1 finely chopped medium onion
2 cloves minced garlic
1/2 tbsp. finely minced fresh ginger
1 tsp. ground turmeric
1/2 tsp. ground cumin
1/8 tsp. ground cayenne
1 cup red lentils
2 1/2 cups low-sodium chicken broth (or vegetable broth)
2 tbsp. fresh lemon juice
1 tsp. kosher salt
Heat the olive oil over medium-low heat in a medium sauce pan. Add the onion, garlic and ginger and saute for about 5 minutes until the onion is translucent. Add the salt, turmeric, cumin, cayenne and let them cook in the pan briefly and then add the lentils and broth, stir and turn the heat up to high. When the liquid boils, turn the heat down to a simmer, cover and cook until the lentils are very tender, about 15 minutes. Remove from heat and add the lemon juice and adjust salt if needed Serve with a spoonful of plain yogurt (or not) and rice, greens,warm pita or nan bread.

I have started out the week by switching Tuesday’s dinner for Monday’s at the request of our daughter who will be out on Monday but really wants to eat the Afghani dal and is less keen on fish sticks. We aim to please here in Omnivore Kitchen!

It is not like we are just opening a box of frozen fish sticks. John portions the fish fillets into the shape of batons, coats it with a mixture of lite mayo and yellow mustard, and packs on seasoned breadcrumbs. The sticks are cooked in minimal oil until crispy.
I started the coleslaw by using some shredded cabbage from a bag. I added shredded and sliced carrots, onions, and kale. The dressing is made with lite mayo, cider vinegar, Dijon mustard, celery seed, and salt. It turned out really tasty and we ate every scrap of it.
Originally I was going to make tartar sauce as well. I figured, though, with all the mayonnaise on the coating and in the coleslaw that we were at our lite mayo limit. Eating some of the coleslaw with a bite of the fish was a good tartar sauce substitute.

Our dinner on Saturday is one of the best things we have made lately. It was warm and cool, unctuous and crunchy, salty and sweet and all around delicious.

Hiding under the cucumbers, cabbage, avocado, and furikake is a perfectly cooked piece of salmon. John used a technique that we saw on America’s Test Kitchen, He brined the salmon in a quart of water with 2 tablespoons of table salt for 20 minutes. After patting it dry he put it in a cast iron frying pan with kosher salt sprinkled on the bottom of the pan. He put the fish in skin side down and cooked it on low heat for about 20 minutes (depending on thickness) or until the top starts to lose its bright orange color and then he flipped the fish flesh side down briefly.
It came out the best we have ever made salmon.
For my part I sliced up the cucumbers and avocados and opened the package of pre-shredded cabbage. (Tough job!) I also made a dressing of soy sauce, white vinegar, sweetener, ginger, and scallions. I added some vinegar and sweetener to some rice we had made earlier in the week to give it a sushi rice vibe. We sprinkled some furikake on top for some extra crunch.
I am sure you will be seeing this dinner on the menu in the future!
Spicy lentils are a work in progress. It was the first time making this dish which we were adapting from a NYTimes recipe. The critique given by our daughter was that we had not used enough oil to bloom the spices properly so that they tasted grainy and raw. Tough crowd here.

This is the basic recipe for the spicy lentils.

So of course we were cutting back on the oil using only 1 tablespoon and some olive oil spray. We were not sure whether a whole tablespoon of smoked paprika would be too much so we used 1/2 tablespoon of regular paprika and 1/2 tablespoon of smoked. Rather than just water we used vegetable stock. We added some soy sauce for more umami and a little ketchup for sweetness. Oh, and about 1/3 cup chopped up onion at the beginning.
I think what saved the dinner was serving the lentils with rice and kale. The additional flavors kind of rounded the whole thing out. I think we will make this again using more oil, all smoked paprika, and more hot spiciness in some form.
