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Gourmet Garden Treat

Hello, tender friends!

I have experienced culinary luxury. Luxury fit for royalty. And it’s keto and can be paleo if you leave out the aminos!

(Why Queen Elizabeth as my royalty example? I’ll explain).

I always favor nutrient density over trying to be fancy in the kitchen. Most of my creations are incredibly humble. I’m perfectly happy drinking meat stock or bone broth every morning for weeks at a time. I currently have a simple tomato sauce simmering away on the stove top while my Cub sleeps.

I’m happy with simplicity.

But every once in awhile, I marvel at how high- end the food that we grow tastes. And the first time that Anthony made shishito peppers, I actually said to him, “This tastes expensive.”

He said, “It should. Those shishito peppers cost between $15 and $20 a pound if you buy them.”

So here we are, eating about $40 worth of peppers in one meal when we make this. And yes, I know that okra is a very humble food that was typically consumed by peasant farmers, but when you flavor it with salt, pepper, and minced garlic and lightly add avocado oil before roasting it in the oven, it is delicious and flavorful. And one of the fascinating things about okra is that it binds mycotoxins.

We prepare the shishito peppers by lightly coating them in avocado oil, salt, pepper, minced garlic and organic soy aminos. (We use only a dash of aminos from a clean, reputable source that we trust. We avoid soy sauce completely because of all the additives). The peppers have a natural sweetness to them that contrasts well with the salt and soy sauce. This is also delicious, and paleo-friendly, without the aminos. (The aminos don’t cause us any problems, so we’re ok with using a dash of them, even if that makes it technically not paleo).

The okra also has a natural sweetness to it. We grow three different varieties, but we don’t really notice much of a difference in the flavor after roasting them. Again, the salt and garlic against the natural sweetness of the okra is a winner.

I rarely feel satisfied when consuming a meal that doesn’t include meat. But we’re in the dog days of summer here in SW Virginia. It’s supposed to be 95° this weekend, so this combination of garden vegetables is hitting all the right notes, as I find I crave meat less when it’s hot out.

While I won’t be giving up meat anytime soon, this flavor combination is fit for a king. This thought got me thinking about Elizabeth I and this well-known line from her speech at Tilbury (which you should totally Google and read if you have never read it, because she was so brave and bad*** and literary):

“I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a king.”

That’s how I feel some days. And after meals like this, my heart and stomach are full (Psalms 4:7).

(Also, if you have been reading this post and wondering why I haven’t addressed the oxalates in okra or the debate about what is truly healthy/truly a superfood, it’s too much to address in one post. And while the food debate, it seems, will never end, one thing that proponents of all different diets typically agree on is that eating seasonally and locally has tremendous health benefits. I can expand on the exhaustive research I’ve done if there’s interest).

Ok, that’s it for today, tender friends! I’ll be sharing a motherhood post on Monday. My little Cub is signed up for his first “independent” activity this weekend, and yes, I feel both excited and like someone is gouging my heart out. I’ll be sharing another food post on Thursday!

Thank you to the new friends, and thanks for stopping by today!

Thank you for sharing!

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  1. Awakening Wonders

    Well you are the Queen of good eats! And I’m in total agreement with your thoughts – ” . . . typically agree on is that eating seasonally and locally has tremendous health benefits.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Stacey

      It’s so exciting to rotate these delicious foods!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Jon

    I was going to like your post but couldn’t get it to take. We tried okra in the garden in some stir-fry last night. It was a nice addition. We peasant farmers don’t have it all bad.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Stacey

      If people only knew how good we peasant farmers have it! Do you ever post pictures of your farm food? I’m curious to know what else you put in the stir fry.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Jon

        Yellow squash, zucchini, carrots, onions, From the Garden. Store bought

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Jon

        Store bought cauliflower, and mushroom s.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Janice Reid

    I used to hate okras when I was younger. Now it’s great with fish and sometimes I even eat it alone, seasoned of course.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Stacey

      My friend who’s a pediatrician told me that you have to be exposed to a flavor 12 times (or something like that) to develop a taste for it. Maybe those times you didn’t like it when you were younger you were developing the taste for it.

      I felt neutral about okra at the beginning of last season, which I think was the first season we grew it. Then someone gave us dried Hungarian paprika and we put it on the okra and couldn’t get enough! I didn’t get into that in this post because we’re actually drying our own paprika out on our front door right now, but I can’t wait to use it! We just knew we had to start growing the paprika after trying it last year.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Janice Reid

        Wow, growing your own paprika!!

        With the okra, when I was young, I didn’t even try it. I just looked at how slimy it was and wouldn’t go anywhere near it. Today with all my focus on health I will try anything.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. ladysheepdog

    I grew up on okra and a few weeks ago, if I remember correctly, Jon from above comments mention it with his garden and I was like, “Yeah, why have I never fixed that for my kids?” So, I now have added that to our menu items as I was looking for a new vegetable to add to our meals. It really is an oldie but goodie.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Stacey

      Definitely and oldie but goodie! I hope they love it!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. My Biggest Foraging Win – tea and tenderness

    […] But let’s get right to it, because this foraged snack made me feel like a millionairess. Remember when I said that shishitos taste expensive? […]

    Liked by 1 person