Stuffed Pepper and Spinach
The best part about the busted ass economy and being jobless is that I get to be super creative in the kitchen and make up new dishes that cost almost nothing. This dish was made from some rice Loren’s mom gave us months ago (maybe even a year!), herbs from our garden, veggies from the farmers market and a green pepper I stole from my parent’s house (hehe).
The first thing I started was the rice because it takes around 30 minutes to finish. I used a long grain brown rice that came in a box with a seasoning package. You know the drill with box rice: empty contents of box into medium size pot with 2 cups waters, stir, bring it to a boil, cover and then simmer for 25 minutes.
When the rice had about 15 minutes left I heated a large skillet with some extra virgin olive oil (we’ll say 2 T) in on medium low heat and then added 1 garlic clove (diced finely), 2 thick rounds of white onion (chopped) and 1 jalapeno from our garden (washed, seeded and diced). I sprinkled 2 splashes of ground coriander, a dash of sea salt and some fresh ground pepper (3 turns) on top of these guys while they cooked. After about 3 minutes, I upped the heat to just under medium and I added 2 big handfuls of spinach on top and 1/4 C raw pumpkin seeds. You may want to add a little more oil on top of the spinach so the little guys down below don’t burn. Keep flipping the veggies underneath with the spinach so that the heat from the veggies helps to wilt the spinach faster. Everybody’s stove is different so use your brain and decide which heat is best for sauteing your veggies and wilting your spinach. Once the wilt was completed, I added 2 more dashes of coriander, stirred and took these veggies off the heat.
Use the 10 minutes before you start cooking these veggies (while the rice cooks) to wash, cut and chop them. You can also prepare the pepper in this time as well or while you’re waiting for your extra virgin olive oil to heat. To cook your green pepper, set your oven to 375 degrees and put a emptied out green pepper in on a piece of Pam sprayed foil, open top down. Make sure to poke a small hole in the bottom of the pepper (you can simply remove the bottom stem and that will be plenty of room for air to escape). To empty out the green pepper, cut across the pepper just under the top stem and remove all the insides. You can put the green pepper in the oven while it preheats–it’ll give it more time. When the veggies and rice are done, your pepper will be done too. You want it warm (hot to the touch) and a little soft but not completely soggy–it will still hold a little crunch cooking it this way. Because there were two of us eating, I cut the one pepper in half (cutting across the pepper with a serrated knife).
When plating, I put down the wilted spinach/veggie mixture first, pepper on top and then filled the pepper with the rice. I garnished with some chopped chives and parsley out of our garden.









