Beans and Bulgur {recipe}

I had some free time over the weekend, so I sat down with my laptop, opened up Excel, and scheduled out every hour of my work week in a beautifully color coded spreadsheet.

Did I mention I’m an accountant?

Right.

Anyway, once I factored in sleep, work, exercise, commute, time to eat, and bathing/primp time, I found I have about three hours of “free” time each work day.  THREE.  I have big aspirations each week—home cooked meals, coffee with friends, blogging,  Wheel of Fortune, flossing, plus 30 minutes of reading before bed—but with these dismal findings, it’s clear I can’t squeeze all of that in every night.

Years ago, in an effort to increase my workweek free time, I started batch cooking food on Sundays.  Sunday morning, while I sip my coffee and listen to NPR, I get to work in kitchen cooking meals for the workweek and portioning them into single-serve containers.  The single-serve containers are KEY.

A typical Sunday cooking session includes:

  • 5 servings of steel cut oats with almonds, blueberries, and cinnamon
  • 2 servings of quinoa (for sprinkling on salad)
  • salads.  Lately it’s mixed greens, tomatoes, onion, cucumber, feta cheese, and half a serving of cold quinoa plus balsamic vinaigrette (in a separate container).  I only prepare salads two at a time because I HATE soggy veggies.  Blegh.
  • snacks.  My go-tos are hummus & veggies, Greek yogurt and fruit, or a loaf of sprouted bread that I keep at work along with some PB to make sandwiches at my desk.  Don’t judge.  I also keep a container of almonds in my desk drawer.
  • The wild card:  something, ANYTHING, I can use for workweek dinners

On a normal work day, I make myself eggs and toast before heading to the office, but when I’m really crunched for time I’ll cook a large batch of scrambled eggs or an egg casserole on Sunday that I can quickly heat up each morning before heading out the door.

I can get by eating the same breakfast, lunch, and snacks most days of the week, but when it comes to dinner I honestly get depressed if I eat the same boring thing every night.

beans and bulgur (4)

Dinner ideas usually come from brainstorming ways to use up leftovers from the weekend.  Other times I’ll cook a big batch of something that I can use in many different ways, so I don’t get stuck eating the same thing four nights in a row.  That could be a giant roasted spaghetti squash, a batch of black bean burgers, or a pot of some sort of grain.  This week, my dinners will revolve around a big ole batch of beans and bulgur.

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Southwestern Tabbouleh

I don’t know about you guys, but when I’m planning for a big event or vacation I tend to over-organize.  I usually have several lists going of things to do, things to buy, etc.  Vacation is about a week away, and I have a feeling the further I get into the week, the more and more things I’ll add to these to-do lists…  I think deep down I secretly like giving myself busywork.  What a weirdo I am 🙂

Since I was so pleased with the Shrimp Tabbouleh I made last week, I was pumped to see a recipe for Spicy Southwestern Tabbouleh in the July 2010 issue of Cooking Light!  I decided to make a double batch (in anticipation of (self-inflicted) limited free time later in the week).

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Tabbouleh with Feta and Shrimp

I don’t know why, but I always get the words bulgur and barley mixed up!  I know the difference between each of the grains, and I can easily identify them, but my brain just jumbles up the names sometimes!

Case in point:  I found this recipe for Tabbouleh with Feta and Shrimp a while back and decided over the weekend that I would make it sometime for dinner this week.  All week, I’ve been thinking to myself “why do they call it tabbouleh when it’s got bulgur in it?  Don’t they know tabbouleh is made with barley??”

After 5 days of contemplating this, it JUST NOW dawned on me that the recipe did, in fact, call for bulgur which is, in fact, what tabbouleh is made out of.  Hahahha… geesh.  Suddenly, this recipe made a lot more sense to me 🙂

First, I cooked up 1/4 cup of bulgur (AKA not barley) per the package instructions and 3 ounces of shrimp.  Then put it all in the fridge to cool off.

In a bowl, I mixed together:

  • 1 tbsp parsley, chopped (the smaller, the better)
  • 3 tbsp lemon juice
  • 1/8 tsp each salt, pepper, ground cumin

 Then I tossed the bulgur (I swear to you, I just typed BARLEY… wow) with:

For you visually challenged that is:

  • 1/2 large cucumber, diced
  • 1/4 cup parsley, chopped (the smaller, the better)
  • 1 roma tomato, diced
  • 1/4 cup chopped green onion
  • 2 tbsp  crumbled reduced fat feta

 Topped it off with the dressing, and put everything back in the fridge so the flavors could mary merry 😉

Come clooooooossssseerrrrrr:

T-A-S-T-Y.  Just like the tabbouleh I’ve had at my favorite middle eastern restaurants… well not JUST like it, but still tasty in its own right.  Next time, I wont be so lazy and I’ll chop everything into smaller pieces 🙂

Stats on the tabbouleh:  360 calories, 50g carbs, 3g fat, 28g protein, 10g fiber

 

I’m off to mow the yard!  WOOHOOOOOOO!

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