We have already been enjoying lots of summer food, my favorite being grilled corn on the cob and homemade ice cream. But in the summer, we also enjoy lots of fresh salads especially this favorite, Toasted Walnut and Red Pear salad. When I say favorite, I mean you will catch me in the kitchen with a fork and the big salad bowl cleaning up any last bit of it I can before I wash the bowl.
My mother in law first shared this recipe with me a couple of summers, and continues to tease me about how much I like it. I think I ate three helpings the first time she served it to me. And now, I’ve adopted it as a staple recipe of my own to share with friends and family.
It’s simple and you will love it!
Homemade Ranch Dressing:
Hidden Valley Ranch Mix™ (Do like I do and get it in a bulk size from Sam’s Club; it’s well worth it.
Mayonnaise (The real stuff.)
Milk
Just follow the directions on the back of the package. I know, you thought it was going to be an intense homemade secret recipe. Nope. But, I do promise, it tastes so different and so much better than the stuff that comes out of the bottle.
½ cup- 1 cup toasted chopped walnuts (I lean on the 1 cup side, because I love the flavor.)
1head red leaf lettuce
2 red pears, sliced into wedges
sharp Cheddar, grated
homemade ranch dressing (I say homemade, because it’s all I like. But if you like the store bought, go for it. No harm done.)
Instructions
Chop lettuce
Top with red pears and walnuts.
Sprinkle some sharp Cheddar cheese on top.
Garnish with homemade ranch dressing.
By Amanda Farris
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/
I know it sounds so simple and it is. But we love simple right? It makes life better.
But the flavor of the sharp cheese, toasted walnuts, and pears mixed together will have you running into the kitchen to whip up another batch of this salad to share with your family.
Just after Christmas last year, my parents sold their big, sprawling farmhouse and moved into a smaller place.
When I say their house, I really mean their home. It was a place my siblings and I — and our kids — all loved dearly. We might still be a little in shock that we don’t gather there for just-because weekends and holidays anymore.
We miss the pond for fishing and shooting fireworks over, the little dollhouse-like cabin where the grandkids played, the acres and acres for driving the Ranger.
I know my parents don’t miss the weed-eating, the mowing, the house upkeep, the pool upkeep, the upstairs/downstairs cleaning, et cetera. We know why it was necessary for our parents to sell the big house – and all the acreage — but I know I’m still in the mourning stage.
Since I live about three hours away, I haven’t had as much time to get used to the idea. I still picture my parents there at that house and it’s a little jarring every time I head to central Arkansas and we drive past the normal exit to go “home”.
But there is something that’s helping with the transition: family recipes.
Even though my parents aren’t at that particular place anymore, we can still go “home” when we’re all together, gathered around a dinner table that’s laden with certain foods like my mother’s turkey and dressing (she makes it year-round) or steak with lemon pepper or fried chicken (like only my mama can make).
And for dessert, maybe it will be just-out-of-the-oven oatmeal cookies, just-out-of-the-fridge cherry cheesecake, or tart lemon pie (my daddy’s favorite). Another crowd-pleaser dessert is my family’s fruit salad recipe. My mom, sister and sisters-in-law all love this one. It has lots of ingredients, but it’s easy to make. As always, just leave out anything you don’t like – and add more of what you do! {My husband doesn’t like coconut or pecans, so I left those items out of my latest batch.}
In a medium bowl, combine the lemon juice, sour cream, cream cheese and sugar. Mix {very} well. In a separate, larger bowl, gently combine coconut, pecans, apples, mandarin oranges, mini marshmallows, red grapes, bananas and cherries together.
Add the fruit mixture to the lemon juice mixture and gently combine all ingredients. Lastly, fold in the whipped cream.
Chill for at least one hour before serving.
Serve garnished with extra cherries and chopped pecans on top.
By Shannon Magsnam of NWAMotherlode
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/
Getting to Know Your ARWB Foodies
Shannon Magsam
NWAMotherlode
What food reminds you of childhood? Probably my mother’s homemade oatmeal cookies. She always seemed to have those ingredients on hand when we were all craving something sweet after dinner.
What is your favorite international cuisine? I’m in love with pizza of all shapes, sizes and flavors. I’m always in the mood for pizza 🙂
What is always in your refrigerator at home? Sharp cheddar cheese, 1% milk for my morning hot tea, grapes, leafy greens for a salad, fresh eggs from my backyard chickens, and bacon.
What is your most used cookbook? “We Gather Together” from the First United Presbyterian Church in Fayetteville. I used to write a feature for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette called “Classy Cook” and one of my classy cooks, Elizabeth Lear, gave it to me.
What is your favorite kitchen gadget? Probably my garlic press. It gives me great satisfaction to use.
Do you have a favorite food indulgence?
My guilty pleasure is a sugarcookie and chocolate milk while leafing through books at the Barnes & Noble cafe.
What is your go-to ingredient that you use time and time again? Cheese. Cheddar, cream, mozzarella, parmesan, bleu.
What is your favorite food meal to cook at home?
My favorite is Creamy Tomato Fettuccine (except I use bowtie pasta) and a stacked salad.
What is a cooking tip that you would like to share with beginning cooks? Even peoplewhocook a lot sometimes make huge mistakes in the kitchen (they burn something, they accidentally leave out ingredients, the meal tastes just meh). In fact, the more you cook, the more mistakes you’ll make. But the more you cook, the more you’ll improve, too!
When you’re not cooking, what are your favorite pastimes? Writing, reading, eating out, walking my poodle, hanging out with my husband and daughter.
What else would you like us to know about you? That I love the Arkansas Women Bloggers community! Each blogger represents a special ingredient that makes the whole recipe even more delicious! (OK, that’s cheesy, but you know how much I like cheese.)
Shannon Magsam is co-founder of nwaMotherlode.com, a website for mamas in Northwest Arkansas, and NWA Mom Prom, the ultimate girls’ night out. Shannon also moonlights as a freelance writer and PR specialist for a Fayetteville-based global firm. She was previously a newspaper reporter covering a broad range of topics, including crime, courts, business, education and food. Shannon and her husband, John, are lovin’ life with their 12-year-old daughter, three chickens, two cats, and 1 standard poodle.
Most of my favorite recipes are tied to a certain time in my life. Eating them is just as much about the memories as the food. A bite of chicken dumplin’s can take me back to a cold February gathered around Mamaw’s crockpot. Tomato juice dripping down my hand from my tinga tostada transports me back to my summer studying abroad in Mexico. And California Cobb salad was my first taste of freedom.
I was living away from my family for the first time completing a theatre internship in Washington D.C. My little foodie soul was soaking up all of the different cuisine (ranging far beyond the standard southern soul food I grew up on in Mississippi.) I was also exposed to a vibrant community of healthy eaters and learned that food could be good for you and delicious at the same time.
One of my favorite places to drop by for lunch was a salad chain called “Chop’t”. (We seriously need one here in Arkansas. Someone start a petition.) They served almost any kind of salad you could imagine. My favorite was the California Cobb.
I love making my own version with leftovers so it’s easy to assemble with minimal cook time.
Assemble toppings on bed of spinach. Add blue cheese to taste.
Top with a creamy salad dressing of your choice. You could use ranch or add a splash of milk to your favorite tzatziki recipe to make that into dressing.
Pop pita bread in the microwave for a few seconds (wrapped in a damp paper towel) to make it nice and warm. Quarter and serve with salad.
Notes
Optional: I went the “pretty” styling route for this photoshoot, but to be honest this isn’t how I usually assemble my salad. I love to toss the whole salad in dressing before serving so there’s a little bit of everything in each bite. After all, that’s how they do it at Chop’t. 😉
By Sarah Shotts
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/
Getting to Know Your ARWB Foodies
Sarah Shotts
Love Letter to Adventure
What food reminds you of childhood?
Cranberry Orange Relish. Every holiday season my sister and I would stand shoulder to shoulder on the kitchen stool as we made this by hand with our mother.
What is your favorite international cuisine? Tinga. I had the opportunity to study abroad in Mexico for my last semester in undergrad. We lived with families and our madre was an excellent cook! My favorite dish there was Tinga… a tomato &ch
ipotle s
hredded chicken served on tostadas with blackrefried beans, crema, and fresh avocado.
What is always in your refrigerator at home?.
Milk for tea. 😉
What is your most used cookbook? Pioneer Woman Cooks
What is your favorite kitchen gadget? Granny Fork
Do you have a favorite food indulgence?
Filling up on queso, chips & sweet tea before the food ever arrives at a Mexican restaurant.
What is your go-to ingredient that you use time and time again? Avocado
What is your favorite food meal to cook at home?.
What I call my “Superhuman Breakfast” to start the day off right… steamed sweet potatoes & spinach, scrambled eggs & leek and horseradish sauerkraut.
What is a cooking tip that you would like to share with beginning cooks? To save time cooking with boiling water start the water off in the kettle first and pour the boiling water into a heated pot. (Learned this one from Jamie Oliver.)
When you’re not cooking, what are your favorite pastimes? Reading, Traveling & Exploring NW Arkansas
What else would you like us to know about you?
I climbed the Pyramid of the Sun in a pair of black converse.
Surely you are like me and the scent of ingredients from a certain food take you back to the place you first tasted them. This recipe for me brings back a very special moment. The tang of the balsamic coupled with the crisp pop of summer tomatoes and mozzarella and the fresh scent of basil remind me of a sacred night where I re-learned the gift of friendship.
My friend Emily and her husband Jon offered to come help me pack up my home before my big move to NWA. Emily and I have a special friendship (as we say, in spite of ourselves). She has taught me the meaning of easy talks on the couch late at night, lazy Saturday morning quiet coffee moments and the depth of love created over a homemade meal.
When your dearest friend is moving away from you, it’s easy to just come over with a box of pizza, an extra sharpie and a fake smile. You throw a few things in boxes, laugh at the hoarding tendencies we all discover when packing up a home and throw out the dreams and plans of your first visit to their new town. We definitely covered the hoarding topic when it came to the napkins in my “party closet”, but Emily showed up with way more than a pre-made dinner. Emily loves best and from the deepest parts of her heart when she makes you a homemade meal and that night, she did not disappoint….a veggie frittata with asparagus and goat cheese and this delightfully refreshing caprese salad.
Its my go to when I’m missing my sweet friend or wanting to impress my co-workers at the summer salad swap. With 4 ingredients that you simply stir together, it makes a perfect side dish to grilled burgers, veggie frittatas, and even homemade pizza.
When I smell basil, tomatoes and balsamic, I will always remember a grande picnic on the living room floor of a farm home that was no longer mine. But the deep rooted demonstration of true friendship that when we don’t know what to say, we always know how to give!
(and yes, this is my adaptation because Emily always uses the finest ingredients, like European balsamic…I’m the friend that goes for convenience and ease!)
For as long as I can remember, I have had a love of seafood. Give me some restaurant options and I’ll always pick the seafood one. Put some fish, shrimp or crawfish on my plate, and I’ll eat until I simply can’t place another bite into my mouth. There was no doubt, of course, that I was going to really like this Crawfish Corn bisque.
With all that being said, the one thing I was most excited about when my brother-in-law announced his move to SouthLouisiana was getting to visit and eating some real Cajun-style seafood. Our first visit was not long after they moved, and I have to admit I was pretty disappointed in our meal options. But visit after visit our food options definitely improved.
Then on our most recent visit to Cajun country, my sister-in-law served Crawfish Corn Bisque. It was a recipe that had been given to her by a lady in their church, so I knew before I ever took my first bite that it was going to be delicious. And I was not disappointed.
I quickly jotted down the recipe for myself to bring back home to southArkansas. Of course, I’ve never been able to make it taste exactly like it does in southLouisiana, but it’s close enough to make me a happy seafood lover now and then.
1 pound frozen cooked and peeled crawfish tails, thawed
Instructions
n a large stock pot, sauté the vegetables until just tender.
Add the Rotel tomatoes, both cans of corns, the Velveeta and cream cheese; stir until fully melted.
Add remaining ingredient and season to taste (We like Cajun seasoning but salt and pepper will work.)
Simmer until desired thickness
Serve as is or over prepared rice or corn chips,
By Karen Weido of Ting's Mom
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/
Getting to Know Your ARWB Foodies
Karen Weido Ting’s Mom
What food reminds you of childhood?
Fish sticks with Mac & Cheese. I’m an extremely picky eater, and growing up this is about all I would eat. So basically, this was my meal every single day.
What is your favorite international cuisine? Italian. I could eat pasta all day long. I love it!
What is always in your refrigerator at home? Milk and sweet tea
What is your most used cookbook? My own. When I got married mine and my husband’s families gave us family recipes on index cards. I put them in a photo album and I use it more than anything when I’m cooking.
What is your favorite kitchen gadget? I don’t even know what it is called, but it is a smasher thing I got from Pampered Chef. It breaks up ground meat, shreds cooked chicken, purees tomatoes, etc. I use it almost daily.
Do you have a favorite food indulgence?
Buttery breads. I just can’t stop.
What is your go-to ingredient that you use time and time again? Cajun seasoning. It doesn’t matter what I’m cooking, it gets a dash of Ccajun seasoning. I was visiting family in New Iberia and found a homemade one that I love. Every time our family gets together, I get them to bring me several bottles of it.
What is your favorite food meal to cook at home? Fried deer steak with mac & cheese and mashed potatoes. My entire family loves it and you can’t go wrong with that combo..
What is a cooking tip that you would like to share with beginning cooks? Learn by screwing up! When I got married I could only cook mac & cheese and scrambled eggs. I’ve learned from experimenting and serving some really bad meals.
When you’re not cooking, what are your favorite pastimes? Reading
What else would you like us to know about you? I’m hardly a Foodie! I don’t eat fruits or vegetables, and I’m doing good to get food on the table each night. But when I find a recipe I love, it gets added to my cookbook and then I work to make it the best I can.
One of my favorite parts about summer is the long evenings perfect for dinners with friends and neighbors. We’ll throw almost anything on the grill, but pork tenderloin is frequently on the menu when we entertain.
Grilling pork tenderloin could not be simpler. I use the 7-6-5 method, which refers to the amount of time each side gets. With the burners on high, grill the pork seven minutes on the first side, six minutes on the second side, and then five minutes with the grill turned off and the lid closed. It comes out around 150 degrees, which is perfectly cooked for us (USDA recommends a minimum of 145 degrees). As always, let any grilled meat rest at least 10 minutes before slicing.
Sprinkle salt and pepper liberally over both sides of the pork tenderloin.
Over high heat, grill the pork 18 minutes, according to the 7-6-5 method. Seven minutes on the first side, 6 minutes on the second side, then 5 minutes with the grill off.
To make the herb butter, soften 3 tablespoons unsalted butter in the microwave.
Stir in about 2 tablespoons of chopped fresh herbs and a pinch of salt.
Spread the butter over the pork when it comes off the grill and wrap the tenderloin in foil to allow the butter to melt all over the pork while it rests.
Slice the pork tenderloin into 1/2 inch slices for serving
By Amy James: Our Everyday Dinners
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/
Getting to Know Your ARWB Foodies
Amy James Our Everyday Dinners
What food reminds you of childhood?
Chicken Spaghetti always reminds me of big church potlucks and cold winter nights. It’s really a comfort food for me. I have a Chicken Spaghetti Makeover recipe that is fabulous.
What is your favorite international cuisine? . Mexican food, hands down. Who doesn’t like a dinner that starts with chips and salsa?
What is always in your refrigerator at home? Milk, butter, and eggs. With these ingredients you can make a meal or a dessert.
What is your most used cookbook? The Gourmet Cookbook. It’s tried and true recipes from Gourmet Magazine.
What is your favorite kitchen gadget? The microplane.
Do you have a favorite food indulgence?
French fries.
What is your go-to ingredient that you use time and time again? I believe that a pinch of salt makes everything taste better.
What is your favorite food meal to cook at home?
Spaghetti. Only because I know my kids will always be happy with the meal.
What is a cooking tip that you would like to share with beginning cooks? Just get in the kitchen and practice, and don’t be afraid to make mistakes.
When you’re not cooking, what are your favorite pastimes? spending time with family, snow skiing, and chain watching Netflix
Amy is a wife, mother, home cook, amateur gardener and MBA who blogs at Our Everyday Dinners. She chronicles her success and struggles in the kitchen preparing healthy and del icious dinners
She started cooking much more for her family eight years ago after Kate was born, and now, every night after she cooks, she snaps a photo of what she made her family for dinner. She uses her blog to inspire people to cook healthy and delicious meals for their families. for her family of 5, which includes her husband, John, and children, Kate, Abby and Alex.
Amy’s blog has been featured on iVillage, Dole.com, Tasty Kitchen, KNWA, Yummly, BlogHer, Marzetti Kitchens, FoxNewsEdge, Parents Playground, NWAMotherlode, Arkansas Women Bloggers, and numerous blogs.
What makes a perfect picnic? And who says it has to be perfect?
Instead of starting with the quest for perfection, let us chat for a minute about the topic of picnics. What is the first thing that comes to your mind when I mention this phrase?
“Let’s go on a picnic!”
Was it a positive thought?
One filled with adventure?
Is it something that you picture your kid asking you with great excitement?
Does it sound like work?
Is it saved only for special occasions, like Mother’s Day or birthdays?
Do certain kinds of picnicking food immediately come to mind?
When was the last time you went on a picnic?
When I was a kid, growing up in the Piedmont of North Carolina, money was tight and meals were anything but frivolous. Get-togethers were often planned but more than often they just happened, simply for the joy of getting together and visiting.
There was a tucked-away park in town that wasn’t really a park. It was more of a wooded low spot with a few picnic tables across the street from a wooded neighborhood. The more I think about it, it probably was a park. The fancy parks with carousels were saved for school field trips but this park felt like it belonged to mom and me. As the youngest I was often the only sibling tag-along with mom and her grocery shopping trips and library visits. Fast foods were not an option for us so mom always had an igloo filled with essentials. For us, essentials meant a thermos of milk, peanuts with raisins, and cheese slices. If it were a particularly busy day we would eat our igloo meal in some random parking lot with the windows rolled down in our station wagon. Some days were special. Extra special. Mom would take our wagon down the road and turn on to the street that entered that wooded neighborhood and I knew immediately it was picnic day.
Same igloo. Same old milk jug, same old jar of peanuts and raisins, and chunk of cheese. Only this day was different.
This day was picnic day.
What makes a perfect picnic?
Having one.
I just realized that I don’t picnic anymore. I have grown up and moved away from the igloo. So what happened? Did I get caught up in the fast paced life of adulthood? Moved on to thinking events have to be too planned and too perfect?
I asked my kindergarten niece Jocelyn the other day about picnics. I wondered if she had ever been on one. She had, at grandma’s house. I asked her where she thought a perfect picnic would be and what food did she think was the perfect picnic food.
For the record, it is in the woods and it is cake.
Get out there and start playing. If you see me, come saddle up next to me on the picnic table and I will pour you some milk.
Lyndi Fultz nwafoodie.com
What food reminds you of childhood?
cheese omelets
When I was a kid, my mom made runny, undercooked, boring scrambled eggs. I decided to take matters in my own hands and learned how to 1) make dry scrambled eggs and 2) kicked it up a notch and learned how to make cheese omelets. Never again did I have runny, undercooked, boring scrambled eggs. Thanks Mom!
What is your favorite international cuisine? slow food from France and Italy
I like the country rustic fare from just about anywhere: fresh fish plucked from the sea, lightly but perfectly seasoned, wine with brie and fruit and long conversations, and whole chicken simmered in broth with garlic. I can appreciate fancy food yet I fall in love with simplicity that is delicious.
What is always in your refrigerator at home? good, grass-fed butter
whole whipping cream
Parmesan cheese
farm eggs
large curd cottage cheese
whole milk plain yogurt
brussel sprouts
thyme
minced garlic in a jar (what, you didn’t think I always mince my own garlic, did you?)
What is your favorite kitchen gadget? santoku knife
Do you have a favorite food indulgence?
fried chicken, yes please
What is your go-to ingredient that you use time and time again? fresh thyme
What is your favorite food meal to cook at home? pan slow-cooked paillard chicken in broth with balsamic and dijon
What is a cooking tip that you would like to share with beginning cooks? Sign up for Cook’s Illustratedbecause they will absolutely teach you how to cook
When you’re not cooking, what are your favorite pastimes? kayaking, fishing or just hanging out in the lake, remodeling, landscaping, going for drives with my husband and hanging out with family.
What else would you like us to know about you? I need a clutter-free zone to function properly.
Most people have trouble giving a clear, concise definition of “Arkansas cuisine.”
It’s not even easy for me, and I was born and raised in this state.
I do know this: We love food.
After Hurricane Katrina destroyed many of the holdings of the Southern Food and Beverage Museum at New Orleans in 2005, the museum put out a call across the South for cookbooks. Almost 30 boxes of community cookbooks arrived from Arkansas. In fact, the museum received more cookbooks from Arkansas than anywhere else.
Arkansas is fascinating to historians and sociologists because northwest Arkansas is so different from southeast Arkansas, and northeast Arkansas is so different from southwest Arkansas. We’re a state of contrasts and multiple influences. The cookbooks that wound up in New Orleans from Arkansas showed the museum staff that Arkansas cuisine has been influenced by everything from German immigration to homegrown spice producers to an affection for the Dutch oven. But Arkansas food has never received its due on the national stage because we’ve been overshadowed by Texas barbecue to the west, Memphis barbecue to the east and Louisiana cooking to the south.
So what’s the best definition of Arkansas cuisine?
If I had to boil it down into a single sentence, I would say Arkansas cuisine is traditional country cooking done simply and done well, using the freshest ingredients possible.
I was fortunate that all four of my grandparents here in Arkansas lived into their 90s. Both of my grandmothers were superb cooks. Both sets of grandparents had gardens, chicken yards and fruit trees. If they were still with us, they would have spent the spring serving the vinegar-and-bacon-grease-soaked salad of fresh lettuce and radishes that always tasted like an Arkansas spring to me.
I still dream of spending summer mornings with them while picking pole beans, purple-hull peas, corn, tomatoes, cucumbers and okra from their gardens.
I also find myself craving the cooking of the late Lucille Balch, who worked in our home when I was a child. We weren’t rich, but we did have an African-American maid who was like a member of the family. I still crave Lucille’s fried chicken, squash, fried apples, eggplant, dewberry cobblers and more. That’s the food that shaped my definition of “Arkansas cuisine.”
In an essay several years ago in the Oxford American magazine, Sam Eifling described Arkansas as a “smallish, landlocked state with Missouri’s backwoods as its roof, Mississippi’s catfish pipeline to its east, culinary powerhouse Louisiana to the south and Texas’ beef-pork-pepper riot at its southwestern corner. Arkansas resists glib division, but when it comes to food, primary are the Ozarks of the northwest, roughly, and then the Delta of the east and southeast. Historically, as now, life was work, money hard, and the only thing cheap was the time that a cook could invest in laboring over the family’s meals.”
The writer concluded that the pig is probably as good a symbol as any for Arkansas cuisine.
My favorite meals?
Give me Arkansas wild duck and cornbread dressing at Thanksgiving and Christmas.
Serve me fried quail, rice, gravy, homemade biscuits and strawberry preserves in the winter.
In the spring, summer and early fall, you can make it fried crappie, fried potatoes and sliced tomatoes, cucumbers and green onions fresh from the garden.
I’m one of those who believe there’s no greater expression of our Arkansas culture than our food. My late grandfather at Des Arc would walk a block from his house to Main Street and request that the folks at the fish market there save him any fiddlers brought in by the commercial fishermen on the White River. For those of you not familiar with the finer things in life, a fiddler is a small catfish that’s typically fried whole. You cannot find fiddlers in many restaurants these days, though my friend Gene DePriest at Gene’s Restaurant in Brinkley does them right.
When I was home as a boy in the summers, our “dinner” was in the Old South tradition – at 1 p.m. My mom and dad would come home from work to eat the big meal Lucille had cooked. My dad often would take a short nap on the couch before heading back downtown.
“Supper” was at night. It was more simple. But there were few things I liked better in the evening than peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, the cold fried chicken left over from earlier in the day and a glass of milk. Sometimes, a fresh cantaloupe would serve as dessert.
Yes, Arkansas is a fringe state, not solely a part of any one region. It’s a state that’s mostly Southern but also a bit Midwestern and a tad Southwestern. We’re a state of contradictions, a state that regularly confounds outsiders. Yet we’re also a state that grows good food, cooks it well and enjoys eating it.
Define Arkansas cuisine, you say?
It’s not easy. The Arkansan will tell us not to worry about it. It’s time to hush and eat.
Rex Nelson of Little Rock has been the president of Arkansas Independent Colleges and Universities since January 2011.
One of the state’s most high-profile writers and speakers, Nelson has had a long career in government, journalism and public affairs. He has been honored through the years by organizations as varied as the Historic Preservation Alliance of Arkansas, the Arkansas Municipal League and the Arkansas chapter of the National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame. He’s viewed as an expert on Arkansas history, Southern culture and Southern politics and has appeared on radio and television stations across the country.
Nelson writes a weekly column for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, the state’s largest newspaper, and is the author of the popular Southern Fried blog. His feature stories regularly appear in magazines such as Arkansas Life and TBQ.
This summer, he will move into a new position as director of corporate communication for Simmons First National Corp.
What foods remind you of your childhood? Fried fish. My father loved to fish, and we ate everything he caught — catfish, crappie, bream, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, you name it.
What is your favorite international cuisine? Italian. Love garlic, tomatoes and pasta. I especially love the Sicilian-Creole blend of cooking that can be found in New Orleans.
What is always in your refrigerator at home? A good brand of butter along with eggs.
What is your most used cookbook? I don’t use cookbooks.
What is your favorite kitchen gadget? A good corkscrew.
Do you have a favorite food indulgence? Fish, be it freshwater or saltwater.
What is your go-to ingredient that you use time and time again? Tabasco sauce
What is your favorite food meal to cook at home? Salty Virginia country ham and eggs.
What is a cooking tip that you would like to share with beginning cooks? I rarely cook.
When you’re not cooking, what are some of your favorite pastimes? Reading about Southern culture, history and politics.
What else would you like us to know about you/I could take you to some restaurants that would make you say: “I wish I had known about this place years ago.”
We’ve been living in the United Kingdom as expats for over a year now and one of the many discoveries we have made is that any number of dishes have been created in celebration or in honor of royalty.
One of those staple dishes is a curried chicken salad dish called Coronation Chicken. You can purchase a boxed sandwich almost anywhere in Britain with this combo of chopped chicken, mayo and curry in between two slices of bread. It was first created for the Queen’s coronation in 1953 and the sandwiches you find with this name vary widely in quality.
The resident hero of British cooking, Jamie Oliver, created this updated version of Coronation Chicken for the Queen’s sixtieth year on the throne in 2012. He calls it ER’s Diamond Jubilee Chicken, and he has removed the mayo and added in its place pineapple, cilantro and nuts.
The result is a delightful bursting-with-flavor salad dish that is as fitting for a main meal as it is gorgeous to serve. Layer the ingredients on a large platter to highlight all the beautiful colors.
We have loved using Jamie Oliver’s cookbooks. They have been a great way for us to discover British cooking and I appreciate how Jamie always seems to try to create recipes that have no waste. In this recipe he gives instructions for using up the cilantro stalks and even the chicken skins.
4 chicken leg quarters and 7 chicken thighs (or could also use 14 thighs)
1 heaped tablespoon garam masala powder
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1 teaspoon turmeric powder
½ teaspoon chili powder
olive oil
salt and pepper
a thumb-sized piece of ginger root, peeled and grated
4 cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
1 lemon
2 heaping tablespoons sesame seeds
½ cup toasted sliced almonds
1 ripe pineapple, peeled, cored and chopped into ½ inch pieces
1 cucumber, peeled, seeded and chopped into ½ inch pieces
1 cup sugar snap peas
6 spring onions, peeled and chopped
1 fresh red chili pepper and 1 green jalepeno pepper, sliced, seeded and thinly sliced
1 cup of plain yogurt
2 limes
1 bunch of cilantro leaves
Instructions
Put chicken pieces skin side up in a baking dish.
Sprinkle all the spices over the chicken, as well as salt and pepper and a drizzle of olive oil. Squeeze the juice of the lemon over the chicken.
Bake at 375 degrees F for 50 minutes or until the meat pulls away from the bone.
Once cooked, remove the chicken skin and place it upside down on a separate roasting tray. Scatter the sesame seeds over the chicken skins. Then put the tray in the oven for around 10 minutes, or until the skin is crispy and the seeds toasted (don’t burn them!). Remove from oven and leave to cool.
Place the cucumber and pineapple on a serving platter. Then add the sliced onions and chili pieces. Pull the chicken apart, discarding the the bones and fat, but reserving the juices in the roasting dish. Place all the meat on the platter as well. Also add the sugar snap peas and the cilantro leaves, reserving the stalks for the dressing.
In the roasting dish, mix the yogurt and the juice of the limes with the chicken juices. Be sure and scrape all the flavor from the tray. Add a little salt and pepper. Also mix in the chopped stalks of the cilantro.
Pour the sauce from the tray over the platter. Sprinkle the toasted almonds and the crispy skins and sesame seeds on the top.
Toss the salad and serve immediately.
By Alison Chino
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/
Getting to Know our ARWB Foodies
Alison Chino Chino House
What food reminds you of childhood?
All homemade cookies.
Cookies were the first thing I learned to make as a child. My sister and I would beg our mom to let us make cookies and she would say that we could as long as we cleaned up our mess. Anna and I would eat so much cookie dough that we usually felt sick by the time we were finished!
What is your favorite international cuisine? I go in phases and currently I’m in a Mediterranean phase. Hummus and really fresh Greek feta cheese are making regular appearances in my cooking.
What is always in your refrigerator at home? Apples and extra sharp cheddar cheese.
What is your most used cookbook? It’s a cross between The Barefoot Contessa and Soup and Bread by Crescent Dragonwagon
What is your favorite kitchen gadget? Probably my emulsifier (stick blender) which I use for salad dressing and to puree soups!
Do you have a favorite food indulgence?
Think cream. Creamy soups. Homemade whipped cream. Cream in my coffee. I can never be a skim milk kind of girl.
What is your go-to ingredient that you use time and time again? I use garlic every single day. LOVE it.
What is your favorite food meal to cook at home? I make soups most often but my favorite would probably be either a pasta with creamy sauce or a fancy salad with lots of ingredients.
What is a cooking tip that you would like to share with beginning cooks? Recipes can always be simplified. You don’t have to have ALL those tools (you can chop up garlic if you don’t have a press) and you can get by with fewer ingredients.
When you’re not cooking, what are your favorite pastimes? Reading, writing and being outside!
What else would you like us to know about you? I live in Scotland, but I miss Arkansas something fierce.
Alison Chino is a born and bred Arkansan who lives in Scotland, where she is learning to walk everywhere and to live with tiny appliances. She loves hiking the Scottish Highlands with her husband and kids on the weekends. She’s blogs at the Chino House and she’s pretty much obsessed with Instagram.
During the month of April, ARWB is highlighting one of our long-term supporters, Petit Jean Meats. Thanks PJM for all you do for us. Follow them on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook.
Growing up in Arkansas, we were always excited when we knew Petit Jean meats were being served. Petit Jean really is synonymous with Arkansas, my memories are almost as thick as shelling purple hull peas with my family on our front porch. Whenever my mom would bake a Petit Jean ham, we would be so excited to eat on it for days. Mother would serve some leftover for sandwiches, but most of the leftovers were used to serve up some of our favorite meals.
I have followed in her footsteps in as many ways as possible and today, make many of those same meals. One of my family’s favorites is when I use leftover ham slices to stuff chicken breasts, you can even add some cheese to make it is somewhat like a chicken cordon bleu. It is really simple and even more so as I have found my family prefers it without breading.
You really only need a few simple ingredients to make a delicious main course your family will be asking for again and again.
If you are using full chicken breasts, cut the thickest part of the chicken breast in half. If it is still over an inch thick, sandwich it between two pieces of parchment paper and use a meat tenderizer to help flatten it a bit.
Next layer a piece of ham followed by a slice of cheese.
Starting at one end, begin to tightly roll the chicken in. Once you have rolled it, you can secure it with baking twine or toothpicks.
Place into a baking dish. Drizzle with olive oil and then desired spices.
Depending on the thickness of your chicken breast, bake 35-40 minutes or until 160 degrees internally. The cheese should be melted and dripping.
By Amanda Fiveash
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/
It really is such a simple dish to prepare and yet the taste is amazing! My family loves it to be served with homemade macaroni and cheese, baked beans and vegetable sticks. The hardest part might indeed be deciding what to serve alongside these delicious stuffed chicken breasts!
You can also make more than what you need and freeze them for later. In this case I would suggest not using toothpicks or removing them once you flash freeze the chicken breasts. To freeze, after you have added your spices, place in a single layer on a flat sheet into the freezer. After 30-45 minutes, remove from the freezer and gently place in a freezer bag. This should allow you to remove just the amount you wish to prepare next time. If frozen, bake an additional 15-20 minutes.
Amanda Fiveash Our Homemade Life
What food reminds you of childhood?
There are oh, so many!
Cheese dip-my Mother’s favorite!
Strawberries-we use to pick them and eat more than made it into our baskets.
Purple hull peas-takes me back to sitting on the front porch and shelling them until my fingers were purple. Good times, great food and cherished memories are brought back when I smell them cooking.
What is your favorite international cuisine? Mexican food has always been one of my favorite types of cuisine. It is amazing to me that they can use such simple ingredients (beans and rice) in so many dishes to make them delicious and flavorful.
What is always in your refrigerator at home? Almond milk, goat cheese, carrots and celery
What is your most used cookbook? It is one my mother gave me when I got married; it has a few of her notes added in the pages.
What is your favorite kitchen gadget? Hard one…there are so many but I have to say I have a deep love for my slow cooker. It saves me on so many days!
Do you have a favorite food indulgence?
Chocolate! Anything with chocolate in it 🙂
What is your go-to ingredient that you use time and time again? Coconut oil, it is amazing!
What is your favorite food meal to cook at home? Pasta. My kids are always asking for spaghetti and meatballs.
What is a cooking tip that you would like to share with beginning cooks? .Don’t be afraid to try. You will never know if it will be something amazing if you don’t attempt it. And it doesn’t always look pretty, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t absolutely delicious!
When you’re not cooking, what are your favorite pastimes?
I love to craft. My children and I are excellent creative mess makers.
What else would you like us to know about you?
While I am not a chef by any means, I love to take simple natural ingredients to feed my family wholesome meals. As a homeschooling family, we spend a lot of time in the kitchen and love to bake even more than we love to cook. My door is always open, but you are likely to find a pile of dishes in the sink. I firmly live by, “Please excuse my messes, we are busy making memories.”
Amanda was born in Arkansas and although lived in several other states, returned home to put down roots before starting her own family in Northern Arkansas. Her blog, Our Homemade Life is a creative outlet to share her adventures in motherhood from making messes with crafts and in the kitchen to homeschooling and their love of family travel