For whatever reason, the past few months I’ve felt like a deer in the headlights when it comes to eating. I have a few favorite snacks, dinners, and even lunches–and I’ve been sticking to them. But to tell you the truth, I’m really tired of them! So I have been looking for ways to incorporate more good foods into my day as I tend to err on the bread and cheese side of things. I began sleuthing in my kitchen, looking around, trying to figure out ways to spice up my eating, per say. I flipped through a few cookbooks–it’s amazing what an hour a month of doing this can do for recharging the ol’ ideas bank–ransacked my cupboards, the back of my fridge, and pantry and I found a few things to try.
This week, I’ll be sharing with you some of these snacks. I want, no, I need more variety in my diet (the winter can get very bland if you let it!) and I want to start incorporating some more veggies, nuts, seeds, and other goodies into my daily foods. I thought there was not a better place than to share this with you! After all, you have the ability to hold me to this—so I better not let you (or me) down
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Today, I made two things–kale chips and whole wheat pear muffins. Okay, I know what you might be thinking right now—those sound SUPER healthy and probably not that tasty. Au contraire mon amie, they are both super delicious and, well, good for you! The kale chips were a surprise actually. Andrew even liked them! If you are looking for another way to get a few more greens into your diet, give this a try—you will be surprised! They are satisfyingly crunchy, salty, light, and enticing.
I also made some whole wheat muffins, a recipe from Mark Bittman. Usually, the first thing I think of when I hear of whole wheat being used in anything pastry-like is a brick—heavy, hard, and really sad. But when I found this recipe I thought I’d give it a try—after all, Bittman states right in the title how light they were in texture. And he was right. There are two tricks involved with this recipe: use whole wheat pastry flour AND a cup of pureed or mashed fruit or vegetable–like banana, pumpkin, sweet potato, zucchini, apple. This ensures the muffin is moist and really brings an incredible element of flavor to your muffin. I made mine with apple sauce and cut up two super-ripe pears (those pears were either were going in these muffins or directly to the compost–the best for baking:), lowered the amount of sugar and used brown sugar instead of white. They are amazing when they first come out of the oven and will still be amazing for breakfast (and snacks) for the rest of the week. If you wanted, you could even make a nice crumble for the top with oatmeal, cinnamon, brown sugar, and butter
. Try these (more recipes to come) and get snacking!
Kale Chips
1-2 bunches kale
olive oil
salt
Preheat your oven to 425 degrees F. Pull the leaves off the stem, place them on a baking sheet and drizzle with a little olive oil and some salt. Toss with your hands to make sure all the leaves are coated. Bake for 10 minutes, maybe a little less if your oven gets really hot–they can singe pretty easily–but I like them that way!

Whole Wheat Muffins, via Mark Bittman
1/2 cup melted unsalted butter—I used canola oil for this (because I didn’t have butter on hand) and they were still great
2 1/2 cups whole wheat pastry flour
3/4-1 cup white sugar—I used about a 1/4 cup brown sugar and they were plenty sweet!
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1 cup mashed fruit or veggie—this is where I used a cup of natural apple sauce + two cubed pears that were pretty mushy, using more fruit than the allotted one cup is ok.
1-2 teaspoons vanilla extract—I added this ingredient in because it goes well with the pear. Feel free to add in any of your own favorite spices too!
1 egg, beaten
1/2 cup buttermilk
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F and grease 12 muffin tins. In a large bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients, then add the mashed fruit/veggies, the buttermilk, egg, vanilla, and butter or oil. Fold the wet ingredients into the dry, until just combined. Fill muffin tins until full, bake 25-30 minutes or until muffins are puffed up and golden brown on top. Serve warm if possible.
Enjoy!





Haha this is SO funny. A friend of mine who I went to highschool with recently posted on FB that she won an I LOVE KALE shirt via a blog- We then talked about Kale chips and I have been meaning to make them. Your post is my final sign. I am going to do it!
Um, that shirt sounds AMAZING! I need one of those! What a great prize—lucky friend of yours! Ha
. The kale chips are great—ridiculously easy to make too. Cheers!
Ohh, I am loving it !!!
Love kale chips, love the new eating is art design!
I can’t get into Kale chips. I’ve tried making them 3-4 times now. They taste like nothing but salt. I want to love them but I just feel ridiculous eating crispy kale.
Love the new design!