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Asian Chicken Salad (in a Mason Jar)

May 12, 2015

chattavore.com | This Asian chicken salad is delicious for lunch or dinner whether you assemble it on a plate or in a Mason jar!

Asian chicken salad is so delicious and easy to make, with a wonderful homemade dressing. It’s great to pack in a Mason jar!
chattavore.com | This Asian chicken salad is delicious for lunch or dinner whether you assemble it on a plate or in a Mason jar!
Asian chicken salad has become one of my favorite lunches. We’ve been eating a ton of salads around here lately. Philip told me that he wanted to lose a few pounds so I started making salads for both of us for lunch. I had been living off of homemade “lunchables” of pickles, tomatoes, cheese, crackers, fruit, and the like and he had been eating things like…brats. Hmmm. So, every couple of days I make four Mason jar salads, carefully layering the ingredients for maximum portability. I’ll get to the logistics of the layers in a minute…
chattavore.com | This Asian chicken salad is delicious for lunch or dinner whether you assemble it on a plate or in a Mason jar!
I decided that if we were going to be eating that many salads we were going to have to have a ton of variety, so I sat down and started making up salads. I thought of as many combinations as I could of greens, chopped vegetables, protein, fruit, dressings, and extras like sunflower seeds. We’ve tried most of them already and I’m working on coming up with more combinations. This is one of my favorites.

This recipe based on one of my favorites from Applebee’s. You guys know that I don’t eat at chain restaurants very often, but I used to, and when we would go to Applebee’s I would often order the “Oriental” chicken salad or wrap (they’ve since discontinued the wrap). Todd Wilbur of Top Secret Recipes engineered a copycat version of the dressing, but the rest of the ingredients in this Asian chicken salad are from my own imagination.
chattavore.com | This Asian chicken salad is delicious for lunch or dinner whether you assemble it on a plate or in a Mason jar!
To make a Mason jar salad, you’ll need a wide-mouthed quart Mason jar. Pour the dressing in the bottom of the jar. Add “wet” ingredients like cucumbers or cheese next. Follow this with drier ingredients like chopped meat, boiled eggs, and nuts. Make sure that you have enough dry ingredients to separate the dressing and other wet ingredients from the greens. Stuff the jar the rest of the way full of greens and seal. If you have ingredients like croutons or the rice noodles I used here that will get soggy if they touch dressing or are refrigerated, carry those in a separate container. To eat, just dump into a large bowl or onto a plate, mix together along with any additional toppings, and eat immediately.

This Asian chicken salad is perfect for lunch or for dinner!

chattavore.com | This Asian chicken salad is delicious for lunch or dinner whether you assemble it on a plate or in a Mason jar!

Asian Chicken Salad

15 minPrep Time:

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Ingredients

    For the dressing (recipe from Top Secret Recipes by Todd Wilbur)
  • 3 tablespoons honey
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons rice vinegar
  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise
  • 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
  • 1/8 teaspoon sesame oil
  • For the salads
  • 2 bags mixed salad greens (about 10 ounces)
  • 2 cups finely shredded cabbage
  • 2 cups shredded chicken (I used about 1 pound of cooked chicken tenderloins)
  • 1 cup shelled edamame, thawed
  • 1/2 cup toasted almonds or cashews
  • 1/2 cup fried rice noodles or chow mein noodles

Instructions

  1. Whisk the dressing ingredients together in a small bowl. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
  2. To assemble the salads, divide the ingredients among four plates or bowls and top with the dressing OR assemble into four Mason jar salads following the ingredients above. Serve immediately.

Notes

Cook time denotes the amount of time it took for me to toast the nuts and cook the chicken. You could also use packaged roasted nuts and precooked or leftover chicken and cut out all of the cook time!

7.8.1.2
76
https://chattavore.com/asian-chicken-salad/

Click here to print the recipe for Asian chicken salad!
chattavore.com | This Asian chicken salad is delicious for lunch or dinner whether you assemble it on a plate or in a Mason jar!

Filed Under: By Course, By Main Ingredients, Chicken & Turkey, Lunch, Main Dishes, Recipes, Salad Tagged With: chicken, main dishes, salad By Mary // Chattavore 5 Comments

Southern Poutine with Sausage Gravy

May 8, 2015

Southern poutine: Fries, sausage gravy, and cheddar cheese. Amen and amen. | chattavore.com

Southern poutine. With the best kind of gravy on earth, sausage gravy of course. On top of baked fries. And with cheddar cheese.
Southern poutine: Fries, sausage gravy, and cheddar cheese. Amen and amen. | chattavore.com
What is Southern poutine, you ask? Or perhaps you are just asking, “What is poutine?” Until a few years ago, I would have asked that same question. Then we got the Cooking Channel and they cleared that up for me, because it seemed that every other show made mention of the Canadian dish comprised of French fries topped with brown gravy and cheese curds. You guys, I’d never even seen cheese curds in my life, let alone heard of something called poutine.
Southern poutine: Fries, sausage gravy, and cheddar cheese. Amen and amen. | chattavore.com
Southern poutine: Fries, sausage gravy, and cheddar cheese. Amen and amen. | chattavore.com
Come to think of it, I still haven’t seen cheese curds, never in my life to this day. They just aren’t sold around these parts. Sweetwater Valley Farm, an hour or so away from me, sells cheese curds, but the one time we went there they were out. And when you are dying to try out a dish but you can’t find the ingredients you need, you have to get creative.
Southern poutine: Fries, sausage gravy, and cheddar cheese. Amen and amen. | chattavore.com
Poutine has a cousin from right here in the States known as disco fries. Disco fries are fries covered in chicken gravy and, instead of cheese curds, melted cheese. That made me start thinking…since I can’t make poutine with cheese curds, maybe I could make something “poutine-ish” with regular old cheese. Then it struck me….Southern poutine. With the best kind of gravy on earth, sausage gravy of course. On top of baked fries…you know, to offset the sausage gravy. It totally negates the calories. Totally. And cheddar cheese.
Southern poutine: Fries, sausage gravy, and cheddar cheese. Amen and amen. | chattavore.com
This was a decision that I did not regret. It was fantastically delicious. You guys, I am going to start a food truck and I’m going to cover everything with gravy. I’m going to call it the Gravy Truck. Or just Gravy. And I’m going to serve Southern Poutine. And maybe regular poutine. And disco fries.

It’s far from traditional, but Southern poutine is certainly tasty!

Southern poutine: Fries, sausage gravy, and cheddar cheese. Amen and amen. | chattavore.com

Yield: 4 servings

Southern Poutine

10 minPrep Time:

35 minCook Time:

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Ingredients

  • 4 large potatoes
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • olive oil spray or 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 pound breakfast sausage
  • 6 tablespoons flour
  • 2 cups milk
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 4 ounces cheddar cheese, grated

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Preheat 2 large baking stones or baking sheets in the oven. Bring a large pot of water to boil. Add 1 1/2 teaspoons salt. Cut potatoes into thin strips.
  2. Add the potato strips to the water. Boil for 3 minutes. Drain in a large colander and allow to sit for 5 minutes, shaking the colander occasionally.
  3. Divide the potatoes between the two preheated baking sheets. Spray with olive oil spray and sprinkle with salt. If you do not have an olive oil sprayer, toss the fries in a large bowl with the tablespoon of olive oil and the remaining salt then divide between the preheated baking sheets. Bake for 25-30 minutes, turning every five minutes until browned.
  4. While the fries are cooking, brown the sausage in a large skillet. Sprinkle with the flour. Stir in the flour and allow to cook for 1-2 minutes. Pour in the milk gradually, stirring until completely combined. Allow to cook until thickened. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
  5. Divide the fries among 4 plates. Top with the gravy then the cheese. Serve immediately.

Notes

This recipe is easily halved!

7.8.1.2
75
https://chattavore.com/southern-poutine/

Click here to print the recipe for Southern Poutine!
Southern poutine: Fries, sausage gravy, and cheddar cheese. Amen and amen. | chattavore.com

Filed Under: Appetizers, By Course, By Main Ingredients, Main Dishes, Pork, Recipes, Snacks Tagged With: cheese, main dishes, pork, Southern By Mary // Chattavore 10 Comments

Pimm Palmer (Pimm’s & Lemonade)

May 6, 2015

The Pimm Palmer is a delicious cocktail perfect for a warm spring day! | chattavore.com

The Pimm Palmer is a delicious cocktail perfect for a warm spring day! | chattavore.com
Mother’s Day is coming up in a few days, and I thought I’d go a little out of the ordinary (for me, anyway) and post a cocktail recipe that seems appropriate for Mom. Well, not my mom…but it seems like a drink that moms would like. My mom really doesn’t drink alcohol (maybe once every 5.2 years) but she’d probably like this one. It’s named a Pimm Palmer because it’s basically an Arnold Palmer (sweet tea and lemonade) with some Pimm’s No. 1 (I’ll talk a little bit more about Pimm’s in a minute) mixed in. It just tastes like an Arnold Palmer with just a bit of a kick (just a tiny bit!) It’s sweet and cold and very refreshing!
The Pimm Palmer is a delicious cocktail perfect for a warm spring day! | chattavore.com
My mom is the person who taught me my love of sweet tea. Like me, she grew up right here in good old Soddy-Daisy, Tennessee and when I was growing up there were always two gallon-sized pitchers of sweet tea in our fridge (so when the first one was empty there was still a cold one ready for us). It’s not like that anymore…sweet tea is a rare treat for us now, but it always makes me think of my childhood.
The Pimm Palmer is a delicious cocktail perfect for a warm spring day! | chattavore.com
My mom taught me a lot of things, not least of which that family is the most important part of life (my dad might have played a little part in that too). She is the kindest, most giving mom that I could ever have asked for. I still talk to her on the phone every night, and I hope that if I have a daughter some day that we have that kind of connection. She is hard-working and almost never misses a day of work. She’s the kind of mom that you don’t dread becoming. She’s just the best, and I could never come close to telling her how much I love her and how thankful I am for all she’s done for me.
The Pimm Palmer is a delicious cocktail perfect for a warm spring day! | chattavore.com
So I guess I’ll stop being mushy now and talk about Pimm’s No. 1 for a second. I had never heard of it until the first time that I went to Beast and Barrel and saw “Pimm’s Cup” on the menu. I didn’t order one that night, but I did later and found the drink to be, for lack of a better term, delightful (how cheesy can I get?). I later saw a recipe for a drink called a “Porch Swing” on Smitten Kitchen and it got me thinking…if I could take out the gin and just mix up an Arnold Palmer with some Pimm’s (by the way, the formula for Pimm’s, a British liqueur, is pretty closely guarded, and I honestly can’t tell you what it tastes like) it would be pretty darn delicious. Friends, I was not wrong. I don’t care for a strong alcohol flavor in my cocktails (I’m a pansy) and this one was just right.

So why not mix up a Pimm Palmer for mom (by the way, this is just my take on this drink…there are other versions with different variations on the ingredients)?

The Pimm Palmer is a delicious cocktail perfect for a warm spring day! | chattavore.com

Yield: 1 drink

Pimm Palmer

5 minPrep Time:

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Ingredients

    For the Drink
  • 1/2 cup unsweetened tea
  • juice of 1 lemon
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 1 1/2 ounces Pimm's No. 1
  • 1-2 tablespoons simple syrup (to taste)
  • For Simple Syrup
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup water

Instructions

  1. Combine all ingredients in a 16-ounce class and stir. Top off glass with ice cubes. Garnish with lemon wedges or slices.
  2. To make simple syrup, combine sugar and water in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil; cook and stir until sugar has completely dissolved. Pour into a jar and cool completely.
7.8.1.2
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https://chattavore.com/pimm-palmer/

Click here to print the recipe for the Pimm Palmer!
The Pimm Palmer is a delicious cocktail perfect for a warm spring day! | chattavore.com

Filed Under: By Course, Drinks, Recipes Tagged With: drinks By Mary // Chattavore 4 Comments

Countryside Café (Ooltewah, TN)

May 2, 2015

Countryside Café in Ooltewah, TN is a great Chattanooga area restaurant for Southern cooking! | from chattavore.com

Countryside Café is a very popular Southern cooking restaurant in Ooltewah, Tennessee. They serve all of your Southern favorites!

I am a bit of a Type A. I have no idea if any of that comes through in my blog, but I am a classic overachieving first born Type A. Exhibit A: I haven’t missed a single day of work this year…I have managed not to get sick (no noses to wipe this year) and, as I almost always do, I have saved my personal days to the very end. This week was the week of the dreaded TCAP (state-mandated testing, for any of you who don’t live in Tennessee) and I couldn’t do very many school visits, so I decided to take a couple of days off. That gave us a chance to visit the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville (and a jaunt to Wish You Were Beer), finish painting our kitchen (except the trim…almost done!), and go to Countryside Café in Ooltewah.

Actually, we probably would have gone to Countryside Café this weekend even if I hadn’t taken the time off. I had excellent food catered from there years ago and have been meaning to get back since the inception of this blog…but Ooltewah is kind of a drive so I have to plan to go out there or I won’t think about it. This was a perfect opportunity! After sleeping in a little, eating breakfast, and doing the first coat of paint, it was almost 2:00 by the time we go out there. You’d imagine that on a weekday a place so far out would be dead at 2 p.m., but you’d be wrong. While we were seated immediately, there were plenty of other diners in the place. Plenty.

There are several dry erase boards stationed in different areas around the restaurant announcing the specials (meatloaf, wood-roasted chicken wings, wood-roasted chicken breast) and the desserts (too many to name, but the highlights included strawberry shortcake, Reese’s peanut butter cup cake, and chocolate chip walnut (ahem, not Derby) pie). A chalkboard on the hostess stand alerts you that the servers work as a team and that you can ask any one of them for anything that you need, and indeed this turned out to be true. Different people took our orders, filled our drinks, cleared our plates, checked up on us. It seemed to be a very efficient way of handling things!

I decided that in order to truly judge a country cooking type restaurant I needed to order sweet tea. It was quite good, pretty sweet but not cloying and just the right strength. I love sweet tea…I used to drink it all day long but somewhere in my late twenties realized I needed to replace my sweet tea with water and I’m sure my kidneys thank me for it. I decided to get the fried chicken filet with white gravy. Each meat is served with three vegetables and cornbread or a Sister Schubert’s roll unless otherwise noted. I ordered cornbread, mashed potatoes, green beans, and fried okra. The chicken was a gigantic boneless breast, breaded and fried and served smothered with peppery white gravy. It was deliciously seasoned and perfectly cooked and-this is important-there was no skin on the gravy. Gah, I hate being served gravy with a skin on it. The potatoes had a good flavor but were a little bit thicker than I prefer. The green beans were cooked until soft (true Southern style) and well-seasoned, and the okra…well, when I saw the okra the heavens opened and the angels sang. It was cornmeal dredged and pan fried, just like your momma or your granny (or I!) would cook in her Lodge skillet. Perfect.
Countryside Café in Ooltewah, TN is a great Chattanooga area restaurant for Southern cooking! | from chattavore.com
Philip decided on the country-fried steak with white gravy (brown gravy was also a choice), mashed potatoes, white beans, and okra. The steak was well-breaded, nicely seasoned, and cooked just right and he liked the gravy as well. He agreed with me about the potatoes…good flavor but a little thick. He also did a little jig (not really) over the fried okra (it’s just so rare to find okra in a restaurant that isn’t fried!). He thought that the white beans were cooked well but a little under salted.
Countryside Café in Ooltewah, TN is a great Chattanooga area restaurant for Southern cooking! | from chattavore.com
The cornbread muffins were also delicious. They were soft and moist and, like Southern cornbread should be, 100% savory and 0% sweet. And they were served with real butter. Amen and amen. Real butter and non-frozen fried okra alone are just about enough to make me declare this one of the best Southern cooking restaurants in which I’ve ever eaten.
Countryside Café in Ooltewah, TN is a great Chattanooga area restaurant for Southern cooking! | from chattavore.com
Countryside Café in Ooltewah, TN is a great Chattanooga area restaurant for Southern cooking! | from chattavore.com
We were stuffed to the gills by the time we finished our meals (not cleaned our plates…there was not way) but we couldn’t possibly leave without dessert, so we decided to get it to go. Buttermilk pie and Italian cream cake were our Friday night, um, dinner (we were nowhere near hungry enough for me to make the King Ranch casserole I’d planned to make for dinner). The Italian cream cake was a delicious, buttery yellow cake with a rich cream cheese frosting, coconut, and pecans. It was wonderful and didn’t have so much icing that it was overwhelming or caused me tooth pain (darn those sensitive teeth!). The buttermilk pie was creamy and custardy and had a beautifully crimped crust. Both were fantastic!
Countryside Café in Ooltewah, TN is a great Chattanooga area restaurant for Southern cooking! | from chattavore.com
If you are willing to go a few minutes outside of Chattanooga to get amazing Southern food, you will not regret going to Countryside Café. The prices are reasonable (ours was $30 and some change pre-tip for 2 meat and three plates, two desserts, and a drink). They serve a wide variety of food with rotating specials and much of it is made from scratch. The desserts are out of this world! The people were friendly and the service was amazingly fast and efficient.

Countryside Café is obviously a local favorite for good reason-they’ve been around for 25 years so they must be doing something right!

Countryside Café is located at 8223 Mahan Gap Road, Ooltewah, TN 37363. You can call them at 423-344-8646. They are open Monday-Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m., and Sunday 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. You can check out their full menu on their website, www.countrysidecafe.net. You can also like Countryside Café on Facebook.

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Filed Under: By Location, By Type, Harrison/Ooltewah, Restaurants, Southern & Barbecue Tagged With: Ooltewah restaurants, Southern cooking restaurants By Mary // Chattavore Leave a Comment

BLT Pasta Salad with Buttermilk Dressing

April 27, 2015

Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!

BLT pasta salad is a BLT minus the bread – bacon, lettuce, tomato, and creamy dressing tossed with perfectly cooked pasta!
Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!
BLT pasta salad is my answer to the fact that April is National BLT Month. Yep, you read that right…there’s a whole month dedicated to BLTs. It’s funny, there’s a day or a week or a month dedicated to just about every food that you could possibly think of, some of them very specific. For example, February 11 is National Peppermint Patty Day…sounds like my kind of day.
Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!
Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!
I love a good bacon, lettuce, and tomato sandwich. It’s one of my favorite deli orders and one of the foods that I crave when I am not feeling well. Something about crispy, salty bacon piled on toasted bread with a couple of perfect slices of tomato, some crunchy lettuce, and a little mayonnaise…it doesn’t get much better than that. And while I am sure that they exist, I don’t think there are many people on this earth who don’t like a BLT.
Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!
Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!
The problem is that I didn’t really want to write a recipe for a BLT sandwich here. I don’t think I have to tell you guys how to spread mayo on some bread and stack some ingredients on it. I tried to think of some interesting combinations to make a BLT sandwich, but I really couldn’t improve on the original. I honestly think it’s just perfect plain and simple (though I do occasionally like to throw some avocado on for a BLAT or maybe an egg for a BELT).

If you like BLTs, you’ll love this BLT pasta salad!

Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!
Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!
Then it dawned on me….BLT pasta salad. Now, I’ll be honest, that wasn’t my original idea. I had a BLT pasta salad several years ago at Southern Star. It’s pretty basic-just BLT ingredients tossed with pasta instead of served between two slices of bread. I whisked up a little buttermilk dressing to toss it with instead of just basic mayonnaise, but this is a simple and delicious salad that’s pretty filling too. I hope you guys will try this BLT pasta salad!
Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!

4-8

111

BLT Pasta Salad

15 minPrep Time:

20 minCook Time:

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Ingredients

  • 8 ounces short pasta like rotini or penne
  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise
  • 2 tablespoons buttermilk
  • 1 green onion, thinly sliced
  • 1/4 teaspoon paprika
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon pepper
  • 1 teaspoon dry dill weed
  • 1/8 teaspoon cayenne (optional)
  • 8 strips bacon, cooked until crisp, drained, and crumbled
  • 1 pint grape tomatoes, washed and halved
  • 1/2 head romaine lettuce, chopped into bite-size pieces, rinsed, and dried

Instructions

  1. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook the pasta according to the package directions.
  2. While the pasta is cooking, whisk together the mayonnaise, buttermilk, green onion, paprika, salt, and cayenne. Set aside.
  3. Drain the pasta and rinse with cold water. Allow to drain for five minutes, shaking the colander occasionally.
  4. Place the pasta in a large bowl. Add the lettuce, tomato, bacon, and dressing and stir to combine. Serve immediately or chill before serving.
7.8.1.2
70
https://chattavore.com/blt-pasta-salad/

Click here to print the recipe for BLT pasta salad!
Chattavore.com | BLT pasta salad is a BLT sandwich in a bowl!

Filed Under: By Course, By Main Ingredients, Lunch, Main Dishes, Pasta, Pork, Recipes, Sauces & Dressings Tagged With: main dishes, pasta, salad By Mary // Chattavore 6 Comments

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About Chattavore

Hi, I'm Mary! Welcome to Chattavore, a destination for people who want to feed themselves and their families well every day! Life can be crazy, which means that getting dinner on the table can be a challenge (more often than not!) and my mission is to take all your favorite recipes and figure out how to serve them on a Tuesday.

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