60
june
2016
yogajournal.com
eat well
NOURISH
grilled chicken salad
with burst tomatoes,
spiralized broccoli,
and pesto vinaigrette
SERVES 4
Finally, a delicious use for broccoli stems,
which happen to be just as nutritionally
dense as the florets—supplying you with
bone-supporting calcium and vitamin K,
and immune-boosting vitamin C.
2 cups tightly packed basil
5 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, divided
1 tbsp red wine vinegar
2 tsp pine nuts
1 small clove garlic
2 cups cherry tomatoes
1½ tsp garlic powder, divided
Parchment paper
1 large broccoli stem (at least 1.5 inches
in diameter), trimmed
4 tbsp slivered almonds
4 (1½ lbs total) organic chicken cutlets
(thinly sliced, boneless chicken breasts)
½ tsp dried thyme
1 lemon, sliced into 4 wedges
6–8 cups chopped endive lettuce
(or other fresh summer greens)
4 sweet yellow peppers, thinly sliced
into rounds
In a food processor, pulse basil, 3 tbsp
olive oil, red wine vinegar, pine nuts,
and garlic until smooth (the pesto should
be the consistency of a vinaigrette dress-
ing; add more olive oil if needed).
Heat oven to 400°. In a bowl, toss toma-
toes with 1 tbsp olive oil and ½ tsp garlic
powder. Season with salt and black pep-
per. Transfer tomatoes onto a baking
sheet lined with parchment paper and
bake until tomatoes collapse and their
skins char, 25 minutes. Lift the parchment
paper and slide tomatoes into a bowl.
Bring a large pot filled halfway with water
to a boil. Trim off any leaves or protruding
knobs from the broccoli stem. Using a
spiralizer blade that creates spaghetti-
style noodles, feed stem into the spiral-
izer. Boil broccoli noodles until slightly
softened, 3 minutes. Drain noodles and
place in a bowl of ice; refrigerate to chill.
Heat a small skillet over medium-high
heat. Toast almonds, stirring frequently,
until golden brown, 5–7 minutes.
Season chicken with thyme, remaining
1 tsp garlic powder, and salt and black
pepper. Brush a grill pan with remaining
1 tbsp olive oil; grill chicken over medium-
high heat, flipping once, until cooked
through and juices run clear, 6–10 min-
utes. Remove pan from heat and squeeze
a lemon wedge over each cutlet; slice
cutlets into strips.
In a bowl, combine chilled broccoli noo-
dles, endive, peppers, and pesto vinai-
grette; divide among four plates. Top each
salad with chicken, roasted tomatoes, and
toasted almonds.
NUTRITIONAL INFO 489 calories per serving,
27 g fat (4 g saturated), 23 g carbs, 9 g fiber,
42 g protein, 129 mg sodium
- REMOVE ANY KNOBBY BITS FROM PRODUCE.
Zucchinis are such a cinch to spiralize because they’re
so smooth. For similar ease, peel root veggies (like beets
and turnips) and remove any lumps and bumps from,
say, a broccoli stem before spiralizing. - SLICE THE ENDS SO THEY’RE FLAT AND EVEN.
This helps secure your vegetable to your spiralizer
so it stays in place as you crank the handle. - CUT BIG VEGGIES IN HALF. You’ll get better leverage
if you’re not trying to spiralize a 10-inch-long squash.
4. GIVE IT A LITTLE OOMPH. Some veggies (like pota-
toes, beets, and celery root) will be a little tougher to spi-
ralize than others (like zucchini and cucumber). Don’t be
afraid to apply a little elbow grease.
5. THINK OUTSIDE THE “NOODLE” BOX. Sure, you can
make an Italian “pasta” feast—but you can also put those
spiralized veggies into a food processor to make veggie
“rice,” or mix them with an egg and fry them for fritters.
Haas swaps zucchini and cucumber noodles for lettuce
when making a salad, and stuffs other veggie noodles
into tacos and sandwiches. The options are endless.
SPIRALIZING
SUCCESS
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TIPS
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