Swimming rama for sure.
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By squeezing an entire can until its contents shoot up in the air, catching it with your mouth, and then flexing your uncanny overly defined biceps.
This really is the only answer. Spinach had been eaten like this for almost 100 years.
Saag paneer.
This is really the right answer. Saag and Palak are the way forward, mix in mustard greens or collards too.
I also wilt it in a wok with garlic and use it as the core component of dumpling or bun filling, combined with tofu, mushrooms, bamboo shoots, onions or whatever else you want.
Saag aloo also amazing for the potato fans. Never been a big paneer fan myself.
This is the best answer but adding spinach to pesto is also pretty good.
Squeeze the can until it flies up and lands in your mouth.
Lightly steamed with a little lemon juice, salt, and pepper.
Raw in a salad. I find cooked spinach to be very unappealing, but raw is delicious.
Just keep in mind that uncooked it's goitrogenic, which in enough quantity can disrupt your thyroid function, especially as you age.
Getting enough iodine in your diet can offset that.
@Wren@lemmy.today
Got it, adding iodine to my smoothie.
I toss in greek yogurt(high in iodine) for that goodness and some citrus to get the iron from the spinach.
Ah, I didn't know that about greek yogurt, which I eat a good amount of.
Seaweed is the iodine source I usually think of.
Ooh good to know. I make a lot of quinoa sushi rolls, too. (also with spinach)
Is that quinoa being substituted for rice? If so, that sounds pretty interesting, especially because I stay far away from rice, nowadays.
Yeah, and I just like the texture more. Sometimes I rice up parsnips with the quinoa for a pretty interesting texture/flavor. You can follow sushi rice recipes to prep it. I don't cook the parsnips.
For filling I matchstick any combo of carrots, cucumbers, SPINACH, beets, peppers, whatever, and let 'em marinate in a tiny splish splash of tamari and sesame oil. Add avocado when rolling. Meat is optional but encouraged, if that's your thing.
Sounds good; thanks for sharing!
Over here, I've been enjoying Vietnamese spring roll wrappers (not fried) to make my rolls, these days. I think maybe I'll try quinoa as a base next time, in place of my beloved SCO (steel-cut oats).
Holy shit I gotta try this oats in spring roll mix thing. Thanks for the tip.
Wilted with onion and garlic, or as mentioned, many Saag curries. I'm partial to Saag Aloo
Squeeze the can in your hand til the top pops off, and just gulp the spinach as it shoots out of the can. Every kid who watched Popeye cartoons has seen this.
When I eat storebought pesto I add some blended spinach. After grating some extra permesan on top and adding a bit of EVO I don't really taste it anymore anyway
I steam it, then puree and mix into the sauce for mac and cheese, to trick myself into eating vegetables.
Saag. It's basically a smoothie, but warm and savory. Throw some potatoes in there, too.
my recipe that my daughters love.
Blanch spinach (lots of it) blend it with parmesan (non American), walnuts, garlic, nutmeg, mascarpone.
Pour over pasta,
it's so good it's addictive
When you say blend it do you mean in a blender or just mix them?
Blender, sorry.
got it. Thanks for sharing your recipe!
Keep it secret, Keep it safe. I keep promising my kids that my kitchen is the only place in the world to eat that.
Will do:)
Based on the ingredients, it sounds like blended in a kinda almost pesto.
I prefer spinach that I’ve sautéed with a bit of garlic and some olive oil.
Sautéed in garlic and olive oil is how I cook most things
Lemon juice too! But yes, this is one of the many great ways to eat spinach
In some form of ravioli
My smoothie:
1 banana
1 handfull of fresh spinach
2 big spoons of greek yogurt
1 big spoon of cashew butter
Squirt of lime juice
Enough almond milk to blend
Ice
optional: protein powder and collagen
Add-ons: berries, matcha, mango, salt, flaxmeal, coconut milk, chia seeds
Just a heads up, you can also freeze fresh spinach in the freezer for smoothies! It keeps pretty well because it freezes into individual "chips" that don't stick together unless it thaws. It's excellent if you'd usually be throwing away spinach that was going to go bad. I recommend buying and freezing a large portion immediately in a freezer bag, just so it doesn't get mushy in your fridge.
Bake it into pies and pastries, form it into patties and fry it, add it to omelettes and pastas, turn it into a dip or creamy sauce…so many good uses for spinach. I add it to protein smoothies too.
Cauliflower cake with spinach added is awesome.
I add it to soups. Sometimes I just have it raw as the vegetable side of a meal
Creamed
Raw on a sandwich or lightly fried in garlic butter. It's also great raw with a bit of oil, salt, and pepper, if you're feeling healthy.
The only way I can do cooked spinach in in Quiche.
Other than that I eat it raw as part of a salad or sandwich topping.
Lots of great ways to serve spinach here already. A few more:
- Veggie lasagna. Be sure to wilt and squeeze out excess moisture, otherwise you can end up with a soggy lasagna
- Strata with bacon
- Creamed, and cooked low and slow. Spinach slowly releasing its juices into milk/cream is incredible. Usually with a cheese similar to gruyere or comte. Be sure to grate in some nutmeg. Scratches a similar itch to saag if you want something like that but different
- Florentine anything, but I'm partial to omelettes
- As with most darker leafy greens, added soup or pesto (or if you have a better term for the non-basil family of uncooked smashed leaf/oil/salt/nut or seed/cheese sauces)
onions, potatoes, spinach, egg, done
Depends on the reason you are eating it. A baby spinach salad is the healthy way I like best it's easy enough to eat a 1/2 to 1 pound at a time.
My favorite spinach dish is a Stouffer’s Spinach Soufflé. It's the opposite of healthy. I used to cook it to a soft set and use it as a chip dip. It became my go to dip to replace artichoke dip
If you’d like a recipe, this one is one of our favorites and my husband typically doesn’t like veggies at all. He loves it. (Please ignore that it comes from a meal kit service; this one doesn’t even use any custom spice blends so it’s easy to do on your own. We tried the kit thing slightly before and during COVID but have long since discontinued it.)
Sauteed, spinach soup, or as part of a noodle soup.
the traditional way is to blanch the spinach then press out the water, but I would recommend lightly dry frying it in a nonstick pan to get it cooked and slightly dehydrated with minimal nutrient loss