[Food Series] Roasted Brussel Sprouts with Cashews!

I’m all about roasting things lately. There’s less clean up and less time baby-sitting food on the stove! This is a  super easy dinner packed with nutrition and flavor!
Ingredients
1 lb of organic Brussel Sprouts (de-stemmed & halved)
2 cups of organic grape tomatoes (halved)
4 organic green onions (whites & greens chopped)
4 tablespoons olive oil
salt & pepper to taste
1/4 cup raw organic cashews
2 cups of Sodium Free, Free-Range Organic Chicken Stock

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Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Toss first five ingredients into a bowl and mix together, then pour the mixture out onto a baking sheet, making sure to spread it out in an even layer. Place baking sheet in the oven and set the timer for 20 minutes. When the timer goes off, give the veggies a stir and sprinkle in the cashews, set the timer for another 10 minutes.
At this point, in a sauce pan, bring the chicken stock to a boil, then toss in the grains. Once it comes back to a boil, reduce the heat to low, cover and let simmer for 10 minutes. Fluff & serve grains with veggies! We had this last night for dinner and our two-year-old devoured it! Enjoy!

[Guest Blogger Series] Exploring the Farmer’s Market by Jennifer Richmond

Jennifer Richmond is a long-time friend, mommy extraordinaire, baker, chef and accomplished screenwriter! We are honored to have her Farmer’s Market musings here on Mommy Hiker! Please check out her Kitchy Cooking Blog linked in her bio below!

oranges and lemons and toddler sleeping at farmer's market
Tommy sleeping at the Farmer’s Market
One of my favorite things to do is make cookies and cakes, especially when my son helps me out. And while sweets are my first choice when it comes to cooking, I enjoy creating savory dishes for dinners and appetizers as well. But I don’t just use any old ingredients. I try to use fresh ingredients as often as I can. And fresh ingredients mean a weekly trip to the farmer’s market.
I consider myself really blessed that I live in California. Not just because it’s in the high 60’s a lot of the year, but also because I have a farmers market I can visit each and every one of the 52 weeks that make up said year.
raw honey table at the farmer's market
Honey offerings
I used to go to the market during the spring and summer when I could get all those delicious berries, stone fruits and heirloom tomatoes. But in the past couple years I’ve started to go during the fall and winter too because fruits aren’t the only things that taste better at the farmer’s market. Turns out the vegetables taste better too.
You’re probably wondering how a trip to the farmers market ended up on a mommy blog or how this has to do with children. It sounds more like it belongs on a food blog, right? Well, while I do use all the fruits and vegetables that I buy in the recipes I make, I also use it as an outdoor adventure for my two sons.
It started when Aidan was a newborn. See, I needed to get out of the house with my infant and getting some fresh fruit out in the summer sun seemed like a great distraction for an hour. I was right. Although he’d end up falling asleep in the Ergo most of the time, he was always happy and excited when we first got there. All that brightly colored produce gave him tons to look at.
boxes of apples at farmer's market
Apples Galore!
As the months passed and Aidan started eating solids, the trip became even more fun because now I could use the fresh, organic produce to make his baby food. And once he had teeth, he could sample all the fruit at the market and help pick the strawberries or peaches he liked best. But the best thing about taking Aidan (and now Tommy) to the market was that since he was helping pick out the produce I was using in my cooking, he was more open to eating the dinners I made with it.
While Aidan no longer makes the weekly trip to market because he’s in preschool, I still go; only now I’m taking his little brother. Tommy may still be too young to sample all the deliciousness, but I know it’s just a matter of time.
peas and toddler at farmer's market
My pea-sized Market Explorer!

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About the Author

I’m Jennifer Richmond and I’m a stay-at-home mom who loves to cook and write. I also adore the 40’s and 50’s. So I figured I’d combine these passions and create my own food blog, Kitchy Cooking. There I cover everything from sweet treats to savory dinner ideas, all using the freshest ingredients I can find.

[Food Series] A Christmas Cookie Carnival!

Yes, I realize Christmas is over! It’s just with all of the holiday hoopla, I wasn’t able to carve out any baking time! My mom and brother were in town for the holidays, we drove up to Lake Arrowhead to join the rest of the clan for Christmas, then my husband surprised me with an anniversary tryst down to beautiful Temecula, California for wine tasting and marathon eating! So Christmas Cookies will aptly be renamed New Year’s Cookies!
Most people have never heard of Cocoons. I think it may have been a name made up by one of my Maw-maw’s great aunts and passed down through the Fontaine family for generations. Making cocoons with my Maw-maw and my mom is one of my favorite childhood memories; the three of us in the kitchen, pine scents wafting in from the christmas tree, the perpetual pot of coffee brewing and cocoons baking to perfection. A splendid blend of holiday smells.
So, here’s the big family secret: cocoons are in fact, russian tea cakes, shaped like little cocoons. The recipe is the same!
russian tea cake
The Fontaine Family Cocoons
So let’s get to it!
The ingredients:
2 sticks of butter
2 teaspoons of vanilla
1/2 cup of powdered sugar
2-3 cups of powdered sugar for coating
2 1/4 cups of flour
1/4 teaspoon of salt
1 1/2 cups of crushed pecans

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First start with softened butter. Put butter in the mixer and cream, slowing adding the vanilla. Slowly mix in the powered sugar, then the sifted flour and salt, then fold in the pecans. Preheat your oven to 325 degrees. Form dough into little cocoons, roughly an inch long and place onto cookie sheet. Bake for about 15-20 minutes. If you let them get to golden brown, they’ll be overcooked, so keep a close eye on them! When cookies are done, as my mom and maw-maw used to do, take a brown paper lunch bag and fill, a third of the way with powdered sugar, place in paper bag, in small batches, fold the bag closed and shake (this is the part where the kids can help!) Tip: Tossing cookies in the powered sugar while still warm allows the sugar to stick better! Enjoy!
What is your family’s Christmas cookie tradition?