Comfort Food Fix: Feel-Good Favorites Made Healthy
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About this ebook
Comfort food made healthy, from the New York Times bestselling author of Whole in One.
In Comfort Food Fix, Ellie Krieger presents a healthier take on classic American comfort food—without sacrificing the comfort part. These 150 soul-satisfying recipes include such hearty favorites as meatloaf, lasagna, chicken potpie, crab cakes, and mashed potatoes, but without all the calories and saturated fat.
With simple tricks and tips, Ellie serves up healthy delights like delicious sweet potato casserole with just a third of the calories and amazing buttermilk waffles with just a fraction of the fat. With full nutrition information for every recipe and gorgeous full-color photos that are sure to whet any appetite, Comfort Food Fix is the perfect cookbook for healthy eaters with healthy appetites.
· Ellie Krieger is the host of the popular show Healthy Appetite, which airs on the Cooking Channel, and the author of the New York Times bestsellers So Easy and The Food You Crave
· The book features 150 delicious comfort food recipes that are lower in calories and fat than you would ever guess based on how great they taste
· 50 lavish full-color photographs beautifully illustrate finished dishes
When it comes to healthy cooking, Ellie Krieger is the chef you can trust. In Comfort Food Fix, she takes the guilt out of guilty pleasures.
“This accessible, health-minded cookbook is a welcome resource in a burger and bacon-obsessed moment… Krieger's simple, time-conscious recipes with easy-to-find ingredients will satisfy sophisticated eaters and down-home palates alike.”—Publishers WeeklyEllie Krieger
New York Times best-selling author and registered dietitian ELLIE KRIEGER was the host of Food Network’s Healthy Appetite, which also aired on the Cooking Channel. She regularly contributes to CNN and USA Today, and appears often on national morning shows.
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Comfort Food Fix - Ellie Krieger
Copyright © 2011 by Ellie Krieger. All rights reserved
Photography copyright © 2011 by Quentin Bacon. All rights reserved
Food styling by Lori Powell and Adeena Sussman
Prop styling by Natasha Louise King
Author wardrobe styling by Nicole Gulotta
Author makeup by Suzanne Katz
All rights reserved.
For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.
www.hmhco.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Krieger, Ellie.
Comfort food fix : feel-good favorites made healthy / Ellie Krieger ; photography by Quentin Bacon.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-470-60309-3 (cloth) ISBN 978-0-544-18588-3 (ebook)
1. Comfort food. 2. Cookbooks. I. Title.
TX714.K748 2011
641.3--dc22
2010046384
v4.0119
For Thom and Isabella
table of contents
acknowledgments
introduction
chapter 1: breakfast, brunch, and bakery
chapter 2: snack and starters
chapter 3: soups and sandwiches
chapter 4: meat main dishes
chapter 5: poultry main dishes
chapter 6: seafood main dishes
chapter 7: vegetarian main dishes
chapter 8: sides and salads
chapter 9: desserts
acknowledgments
Many talented people have put their extraordinary passion, skill and hard work into this book. I am grateful to have the opportunity to recognize them here.
thank you
• Thom and Isabella, for being my heart’s center and my most dedicated tasters
• Mom and Dad, Fran Wilder and Howard Krieger, for giving me comfort in countless ways and teaching me that if I put my mind to it, I can do anything.
• Robert Flutie and Hilary Polk Williams, for managing the big picture skillfully and creatively while also keeping track of the smallest details.
• Jane Dystel and Miriam Goderich, literary agents, and Marc Szafran, Esq., for your guidance, expertise, and support.
• Justin Schwartz, editor extraordinaire. You said it and I agree: We make a great team.
• Adeena Sussman, for being wholeheartedly involved in this book and lending your talent to so many of the recipes from concept to development to styling.
• Chefs Molly Rundberg and Karen Ferries, RD, for your hard work, good company, and educated palates.
• Dani Koch MacKinnon, MS RD, for the precision and professionalism you brought to each and every nutrition analysis and comparison.
• Quentin Bacon photographer; Lori Powell food stylist; and Natasha Louise King, prop stylist, for stunning photos that truly capture the food’s lusciousness and comfort factor. Lori, thanks also for your creative help with a number of the recipes themselves.
• Suzanne Katz, make-up artist, and Nicole Gulotta and Isabel Butel, wardrobe stylists, for helping me look my very best.
• Janell Vantrease and Jaclyn Rutigliano, publicists, for your flair, enthusiasm, organization, and persistence.
• All the folks at John Wiley and Sons who have dedicated so much to this book.
• Food Network, for all your support.
introduction
Comfort food is the food that makes us feel good—satisfied, calm, cared for, and carefree. It’s food that fills us up emotionally and physically, connecting us back to our first eating experiences that soothed hunger pangs and put us cozily in the arms of our caregiver. Finding comfort in food is a basic human experience.
But what you think of as comfort food is as unique as you are. If your heritage is Italian, risotto and lasagna might hit the spot for you, whereas if you’re from down South, it is more likely grits and banana pudding. Chocolate chip cookies might stir warm, fuzzy memories of cooking with your grandma, or you might yearn for the apple crisp you had every year after your family’s apple-picking outing. For some it’s the happy hour
wings and nachos that take the edge off a stressful day; for others it’s creamy potato salad and coleslaw that bring them back to happy childhood moments.
What comforts you is shaped by your individual memories, experiences, and food traditions. It also depends on whether you are a man or woman. Studies show women tend to go for fuss-free, sweet snacks like cookies and chocolate while men like to be pampered with homemade soups and pasta dishes. There is chemistry involved too—foods rich in carbohydrates can trigger compounds in your brain that have a calming effect. No matter what you yearn for, you will find it here, where over 150 recipes cover every corner of the comfort food realm. In this book, you are sure to find your familiar feel-good favorites, as well as discover some delicious new ones.
Food is one of the most glorious and joyful parts of life and it should make you feel good, but not just while you are eating it. I believe food should provide well-being for the long term too. Unfortunately, while many typical comfort foods taste good, they leave us overstuffed and uncomfortable; and because they are laden with calories, sodium, and saturated fat, over time, they could make us feel quite awful, contributing to health issues like overweight, diabetes, and heart disease.
Happily, the dishes in this book are edible proof that you don’t have to choose between your favorite foods and your well-being. That’s because each recipe here is fixed, or redesigned, so it hits just the right comfort spot, giving you your fix
without the unhealthy downsides. I don’t rely on artificial ingredients and additives to achieve this, as many make-over cookbooks do. Rather, I use all-natural, real foods, employ a few simple techniques and swap-outs (see The 15 Fix Factors, following) and I follow my tried-and-true Usually-Sometimes-Rarely
food philosophy.
By amplifying the healthiest Usually
ingredients—fruit, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat dairy, nuts, seeds, beans, and healthy oils—and strategically using Sometimes
foods like white flour or dark chocolate and even Rarely
foods like cream, butter, and bacon, I am able to create recipes with all the full-flavored appeal you yearn for, but in a more balanced, healthier way. With these recipes, in addition to the immediate pleasure of taste, you get the lasting sense of well-being, knowing the food you and your loved ones are enjoying could contribute to a full, happy life down the road. Now that’s what I call comforting.
About the Nutrition Facts and Comparisons
I don’t cook with a calculator at hand to get a certain nutrient profile from a recipe. Rather, I set out to make a delicious dish with all the familiar tastes and textures you expect, using the principles laid out in my Usually-Sometimes-Rarely
food philosophy. Incredibly, when I do so, the numbers tend to work out on their own. While I prefer to focus on the balance and quality of the food, numbers can be a helpful guide, so I have included the nutrition facts for each recipe, with the amount of calories, fat, protein, carbohydrate, fiber, cholesterol, and sodium in each serving. Since some fats are beneficial and others detrimental, I further break down fat into saturated (bad fat), monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated (good fats).
I have also listed good and excellent sources of essential nutrients in each recipe. To qualify as a good source, a serving must contain at least 10% of the Daily Value (the standard daily recommended intake) and to be called an excellent source it needs to provide at least 20% of the Daily Value. I encourage you not to get hung up on these values, but factor them in when planning your meals and let them serve as a reminder that vitamins and minerals are not just found in powders and pills as so many marketers would have us believe. They are bountifully present in delicious, wholesome foods.
Keep in mind that the nutrition information excludes optional ingredients or anything added to taste, and if there is a choice of ingredients, like nonfat or low-fat yogurt,
I always use the first option listed for the analysis.
To help put the nutrition breakdown in perspective, here are some daily total numbers to shoot for based on a 2,000-calorie diet (the maintenance calorie level for most moderately active women):
Total Fat: 65 g
(Saturated fat: 20 g or less, Monounsaturated fat: 25 g, Polyunsaturated fat: 20 g)
Protein: 90 g
Carbohydrate: 275 g
Fiber: 28 g or more
Cholesterol: 300 mg or less
Sodium: 2,300 mg or less
Regarding portion size, since everyone has different appetites and different caloric needs, there will always be a range of how many people a given recipe serves. But in order to do the nutrition analysis I had to pick one number, so I chose to base the serving sizes on amounts that would satisfy most moderately active women. If you are serving a group of high school football players, you are training for a marathon, or you are not as active as you’d like to be, adjust the portions accordingly.
You will notice that for each recipe there is a before and after comparison of calories, saturated fat, sodium, fiber, and cholesterol. I think you will be as startled as I was to see the huge differences a few small changes to a typical preparation can make. What those numbers don’t reveal is that the fixed
or after
recipes are also considerably richer in nutrients and health-protecting antioxidants as well. Unless otherwise noted, the before
recipe is analyzed from a common analogous recipe found on a popular Web site or in a classic cookbook. And I equalized the servings so the comparison you see reflects the same portion sizes, except in recipes where a serving is a whole item like a sandwich or a muffin. In those cases I compared them item for item.
fat math
If you have an eye for numbers you might wonder why the breakdown of the individual types of fat (mono, poly, and sat) listed in my nutrition data usually add up to less than the total fat. For example, one recipe lists the fat content like this: Total Fat 11g (Mono 5g, Poly 2g, Sat 1g). The answer requires a little Chemistry 101,
so bear with me. I’ll make it easy.
All fat molecules are made of three chains, called fatty acids, which are connected to a base. Picture a chain link fence where the poles holding it up are the base and the chain links are the fatty acids. There are different types of fatty acid chains– monounsaturated, polyunsaturated, and saturated —which give the fat its defining characteristics.
So here’s where the numbers come in: the total fat is a measure of the entire fence
(the poles and the chain links) whereas the mono, poly, and sat fat only pertain to the chain links. Also, there are trace amounts of naturally occurring trans fat (another kind of link) in many foods that is not reflected in my analysis. Plus, all the numbers are rounded to the nearest tenth, so that affects the total, too, however slightly. In all, that’s why the mono, poly, and sat fats usually add up to less than the total fat.
The 15 Fix Factors
1. Get Creamy, (Nearly) Creamlessly
Low-fat milk thickened with flour or cornstarch, along with canned evaporated milk, which is simply milk that has been cooked down to release some of its water, are ideal for velvety cream sauces, soups, and puddings. Sometimes I finish the dish with a little real cream, but just a touch. For salad dressings, dips, and dessert toppings, I cut half the mayo or whipped cream in a typical recipe with regular or Greek-style nonfat yogurt to get a rich, creamy base more healthfully. A small amount of reduced-fat sour cream also amps up the creamy factor beautifully with less fat but no artificial ingredients.
2. Go Halfsies
Substituting all egg whites in an egg dish robs it of its sunny yellow richness, and using only whole-wheat flour in brownies and cookies makes them too heavy and healthy
tasting. Same goes for other substitutions. That’s why I split the difference for most of my fixes. By using half whole eggs and half egg whites, or half whole-grain and half all-purpose flour, and so on, you get the taste and texture you yearn for while still improving the nutrition profile.
3. Un-Fry
You can achieve that craveable crispy texture that makes foods like fried chips, cutlets, and fish fingers so good by lightly breading if necessary, then tossing or spraying with oil and baking until crispy brown. For some dishes, like crab cakes, go for maximum crispiness by cooking them in a large nonstick skillet, which allows you to use just a tablespoon of oil.
4. Boost Veggies and Beans
Adding extra beans and veggies to dishes helps cut back on high-cal starches and meat without skimping on portions. It also provides volumes of important nutrients, color, taste, and texture. That’s why I stir ribbons of zucchini into my fettuccine Alfredo, and add mushrooms to my meatloaf and beans to my beef tacos.
5. Bake Better
For tender, moist, lighter muffins and quickbreads, fruit and vegetable purees like apple-sauce, pumpkin puree, or carrot puree can substitute for up to half the fat typically used. Yogurt or almond butter work well to replace some of the butter in brownies and cookies.
6. Oil Well
I use antioxidant-rich extra-virgin olive oil for most dishes, but it doesn’t take high heat well and its fruity flavor isn’t right for every dish, so I use neutral-tasting canola oil for stir-fries and baking. Although these oils are healthy, all fat has about the same number of calories—120 per tablespoon—so use it sparingly. It just takes two teaspoons of oil to cook one onion—which is how so many recipes start—so measure it out instead of glug-glugging it in. And always keep some oil spray handy for oven frying and prepping baking pans.
7. Go Lo-So
The best way to rein in sodium is to start with good flavor by focusing on the freshest high-quality ingredients. When using canned staples like tomatoes, broth, or beans, buy no-salt-added or low-sodium, then season the dish generously with healthful ingredients like fresh herbs, citrus, aromatics like garlic and onions, and ground spices. Add salty ingredients like olives, capers, and cheese sparingly, and then just enough salt to bring all the flavors together in the end.
8. Be a Cheese Wiz
When it comes to cheeses like cheddar, Parmesan, and blue, I always use the real thing for full flavor and meltability. I just use less—which dramatically cuts fat, calories, and sodium—and I use it strategically. My rule: get the best quality and go for the most flavorful variety. So I always grate my own Parmesan and use extra-sharp cheddar instead of mild. And I put the cheese on top of the dish where you can see it all. This way has more mouthwatering visual impact than if you were to fold it in.
9. Sweeten Smartly
Whenever possible I use unrefined sweeteners like honey, maple syrup, and molasses. They give your blood sugar a more gentle rise than refined sugar does and they have some antioxidants and minerals to offer. Even so, they are all basically still high-calorie added sugars,
so I use them sparingly.
10. Add Whole Grain
Simply using whole-grain pasta, brown rice, or whole-grain bread instead of their refined white counterparts dramatically boosts the fiber, antioxidants, and minerals in a dish. Plus since they are digested more slowly, whole grains make you feel fuller longer. For baking I use whole-wheat pastry flour, which is extra-soft and tender so it provides whole-grain goodness but keeps things light and mild tasting.
11. Think CTP (Cut-Trim-Portion)
There’s no need to give up red meat to eat healthy—meat is the center point of so many fabulous comfort foods. The key is to do it right: 1) Get the leanest cut. As a rule, cuts with the word loin
or round
in the name are leanest. Buy ground meat that’s 90% lean or higher. 2) Trim the meat of all visible fat before cooking. 3) Cook sensible portions, 3 to 4 ounces, cooked, per person.
12. Keep it Real
Sometimes a little of the real thing goes a long way. That’s why I would rather use two slices of real bacon in my BLT than four slices of turkey or tofu bacon.
And I believe there is no acceptable substitute for real dairy, full-fat whipped cream. I use these and other Rarely
ingredients in minimum amounts for maximum impact.
13. Use a Bit of Butter
For most recipes I am able to substitute healthy oil or other ingredients for butter without sacrificing taste or texture, but for some, a bit of butter is necessary. Cookies, pie crusts, and mashed potatoes for example, all need a little butter to get their respective crumbly, flaky, or rich texture. But just a few tablespoons cover a whole batch of cookies or pie dough, and all you need is one tablespoon for really creamy mashed potatoes.
14. Cook to Keep Nutrients and Lose Fat
It’s not only the ingredients you choose, but the way you cook them that makes a difference. I recommend steaming or microwaving vegetables instead of boiling them to preserve the water-soluble vitamins (like B vitamins and vitamin C), which leach out when immersed in liquid. Also, since the skin of produce has so many nutrients, I keep the skins on my potatoes, apples, cucumbers, and others whenever possible. And just as I cook to keep the nutrients, I also cook to eliminate fat by broiling or boiling higher-fat meats like chicken wings or lamb shank to render and discard the fat.
15. Repro-Portion
Most of us have grown accustomed to much bigger servings of food than we