Tags
burrito bowl, food, food photography, garden, tofu, vegetarian
I finally ventured out into the garden, and was promptly rewarded with all of this.
It was quite shocking to see there were things to harvest. I didn’t think the garden was still alive. The mosquitoes, too, were still clearly very much alive. I have my legs to prove it. What’s not clear if it’s still alive is Mr. Groundhog. Why else would he leave me with these beauties untouched?
It was even more shocking to discover mache (corn salad) growing. I never knew they come back in Autumn.
There’s so much to learn from the garden. Who would have thought I would be serving summer fare this late in the year, with plenty of fresh tomatoes and corns! I’ll be digging through this bounty for the next few days. A few of these vegetables are a little bit overgrown, like the beans and the cucumbers. But they’re homegrown and have never been touched by any nasty chemical, so they will be eaten. Don’t worry I’ll be able to make them taste better than edible.
In the meantime, here’s dinner tonight. Much, much better than just edible.

Burrito Bowl Dinner
The Chicken/Tofu
2 boneless chicken breasts
1 tsp garlic powder
1 tsp dried oregano
1 tsp ground cumin
2 tsp chili powder (the kind you use to make chili con carne)
1 tbsp lime juice
1 tbsp olive oil
salt & pepper
1. Mix all seasonings and marinade chicken in it for at least half an hour. By the way, I like to flatten my chicken with a mallet first before marinating and grilling, but it’s optional.
2. Grill chicken on medium-high fire, for just a few minutes on each side (3-5 minutes) or until cooked through.
3. Let chicken rest for 5 minutes before slicing. Tofu may be substituted for the chicken for a vegetarian option.
The Tomato Salsa & The Corn Salsa
For the fresh tomato salsa (pico de gallo), mix diced seeded tomato, diced onion, minced jalapeno, chopped cilantro, lime juice, salt & pepper, and a pinch of sugar (optional).
For the corn salsa, it’s pretty much the same as the tomato salsa. You can use canned or fresh corns on the cob. I used fresh and grill them before cutting the kernels off the cobs. Then mix corns with the same ingredients as the tomato salsa. Obviously, since corns are already sweet, you don’t need sugar.
Assembling the bowl
Layer all the bowl components, starting with cooked rice, or in my case, quinoa, then the meat/tofu, then the salsa, and finally put a dollop of sour cream (a must, according to the husband) and sprinkle with cheese (if you like). You can add beans and lettuce, too, if you like. I like to sprinkle my bowl with more chili powder and lime juice before serving.
Too bad I didn’t have your food on my table tonight. I’m a bachelor now. Melanie and her two sisters are at a big quilt show in Des Moines today and tomorrow. She will come home with a lot of new ideas.
Meanwhile, it was a simple supper. Maybe some cheese and crackers in a bit while I watch some tv.
Thanks for the food offering tonight. It was really nice.
Couldn’t you have managed to throw something in the oven, at least? Geez! You sound like my husband. I swear it’s all an act. He was a bachelor living on his own at one time. How did he feed himself?
Actually crackers and cheese sound pretty good. Just have ready the wine and maybe a bowl of grapes. Then, you’ll have quite a TV dinner! 🙂
It wasn’t just crackers and cheese. I also had home made pancakes. While watching tv, I had some rum and OJ. I’m full enough.
Coffee in the morning and a healthy bowl of cereal followed by a walk. Lunch will be some home made yogurt, dried prunes, and home made granola sprinkled on top. Dinner might be pita pizza with our home made pesto in place of red sauce.
Now are you getting hungry. 🙂
Maybe for the pizza with pesto, sounds like a good plan. I see Melanie left you with plenty of provisions. 🙂
Yep…she takes good care of me. Lucky me.
I fixed that plant ID problem. Thank you for your help. 🙂
Always happy to help! 🙂
wow! what an abundance of fresh, organic vegetables! i would be so in love!
i’ve never seen or heard about mache before. i love any kind of leafy green 🙂 also, what is the gourd looking thing? i’ve never seen that before either 🙂
your photos are lovely by the way. they’re all so crisp and clear..and simple too. very nice!
Oh, I’m in love alright! Especially when I hardly ever watered. Sometimes I feel that my plants just want me to leave them alone. 🙂 Mache is not that widely known I guess, or commonly sold in the markets. A shame, really, ‘cos it tastes great in salads.
The gourd is actually a winter squash, called Black Futsu. First time I grew it. It started green, then black, then this greyish orange when ripe.
Thanks for stopping by Maria, and for the compliment! 🙂
Look at the harvest!!! That is awesome for October!!
Yup! That’s my Oct surprise. And I was thinking the garden was done, time to move on to apples and pumpkins. I guess the garden has another thought. I’m not complaining. I could use year-round fresh tomatoes, or corns! 🙂
I’m super impressed! I just had a mini harvest today, but nothing even close to what you’ve brought in. Enjoy the last feast of the summer!
Sometimes I amaze myself! Ha, just kidding! I’m still learning in the garden, Meg, but sometimes I get lucky. Thanks for dropping by. 🙂
What a lovely harvest! And an even lovelier dinner!
I got something out of my garden today too….27 1/2 pounds of sweet peppers. Then I ripped ’em out. I didn’t even bother picking the smaller ones,or the harvest would have been larger. Of course, they will all be donated to the food bank, because my freezers are full. Oh, I did put a couple of them into a pot of chili, but nothing as pretty and fancy as your dinner!
Hi Granny, glad to have you here in the comment lounge! Nobody can beat you in the pepper growing department, surely. 27+ lbs of peppers from one harvest is er … what’s the word? Insane! Lol! And so generous of you to give to the food bank; it’ll be much appreciated, I’m sure.
Dinner was quite nice, everybody liked it. I wish you could have come and join us, then it’d be even better! 🙂
Beautiful dish as usual! I love it 🙂
Thanks, Catherine! So kind of you to say! 🙂
Wow! What bounty!
I know, right? Took me by surprise completely!
lucky you -I have a chili harvest outside that I havent taken yet but I think I should having seen your blog 🙂
I have a question on your photos – the first panel with 6 or 8 photos arranged neatly together, as far as I can tell you cannot do that in wordpress, did you prepare on ppt and upload or how did you manage. Would love to know the secret if you are willing to share – greetings the perpetually layout challenged Polianthus!
I do it all on wordpress, polianthus! If you click gallery, you’ll be able to upload multiple images at once. Go to your settings, and under media, click on your choice of gallery. The one I use is mosaic, and the images come up the way they do. I used to do it on ppt. too, but it’s a pain to get everything lined up. Hopefully, that helps! 🙂
Lovely
Thanks, Sonal!