What better to do on a brisk Sunday morning in February, than take a trip to the Marin Civic Center Farmers Market. It has been years since I have been to this market, maybe more so because it is a 45 minutes drive from where I live. The snow capped mountains around the North Bay, the sunshine, after a week of cold rain, what a beautiful day. Now I believe this is one of the biggest Farmers Markets in the Bay Area and what a treat it was. Booths of everything you could every imagine. My main inspiration for this trip was to check out the GF baked good from Mariposa Bakery. What a treat. I got a delicious loaf of vegan Faux Rye Bread, a baguette, 4 glazed GF Chocolate donuts and a cookie. Yummy. I was so surprised to see all of the Gluten Free samples from various vendors. Lots of GF spice blends, dips, cheeses, hot foods. The abundance of fresh fruits and vegetables. I got a bunch of purple kale, to make kale chips, a bunch of red chard and a bunch of rainbow chard. Also some blood oranges, seedless mandarins, Asian pears, fresh strawberries. I also picked up a pack of local organic GF chicken andouille sausage, wow that a delicious treat. Now what to make. Hum.... I have chips to make from the kale, the rye bread will be sliced and topped with Swiss cheese for sandwiches. The baguette will make an amazing garlic bread. The donuts will be breakfast tomorrow. My cookie was eaten while I sipped on a cup of organic coffee. Now for the chard and chorizo. I'm thinking, slow food, stewed tomatoes, garlic, chard, sausage, maybe some cannelli beans served with GF garlic bread using the Mariposa Baguette.
Now it is all coming together. Local, Organic, GF, sustainable food. What could be better.
3 tablespoons olive oil
4 chicken andouille sausage links, cut into ¼-inch dice
2 garlic cloves, sliced thinly
½ teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
2 heads Chard, I used one red chard and one rainbow chard, tough stems removed. Leafy greens coarsely chopped
2 cups high-quality canned diced tomatoes, I use Muir glen organic
1 14 oz can of cannelli beans, drained and rinsed
1 tablespoon oregano
Kosher salt and cracked black pepper
1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar
Sauteing the sausage. Set a deep skillet or saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the olive oil. Put the sausage and garlic into the hot oil. Cook, stirring frequently, until the garlic is golden-brown, about 2 minutes. (Don’t burn it!) Add the red pepper flakes. Stir. Add the chard and stir, cooking until the chard starts to wilt.
Finishing the stew. Immediately add the tomatoes and oregano. Stir. Add a couple of pinches of salt and pepper and stir until the liquid comes to a boil. Reduce the heat to low and cook until the chard is softened, but not entirely soggy, about 10 to 15 minutes. Add the cannelli beans. Stir to incorporate. Remove the pot from the heat and cover it, and then allow it to sit for 10 minutes. Take the lid off the pan and season with salt, pepper, and as much of the apple cider vinegar as tastes good to you.
Showing posts with label Marin County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marin County. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
A Hidden Puerto Rican Gem in San Rafael, California
If you find yourself in the city of San Rafael, don’t miss a trip to SOL FOOD, Puerto Rican Cuisine. Whether or not you eat gluten-free, this eatery has plenty to offer. The Beef is all natural, the Chicken is Free Range, all the salads are organic. They offers several Vegan options and almost everything on the menu is offered Wheat Free.
On my first trip to SOL FOOD, I sampled two of the dishes off the vast menu. The first came recommended by the young lady at the register, the Tostones con queso, 5 tostones (green plantains, fried, smashed and fried again, topped with melted jack cheese and mojo (a garlic and olive oil blend), you may add fresh tomatoes or avocado to top this off. My second dish was the A La Carte, polo, (Boneless skinless Free Range Chicken thighs marinated with oregano and garlic, then baked. I also got a side of the most amazing black beans and rice. The black beans were simmered with peppers, onions and cilantro. I was in heaven. The portions are very generous and it is a great place to order several items and spilt them among your friends.
If you haven't been to Sol Food, it's owned by Sol Hernandez, an enterprising San Rafael native who decided to bring Puerto Rican food to Marin. She lived on the island for quite awhile with her boyfriend and his mother and spent her free time learning how to cook the local dishes. The original Sol Food is a tiny little almost shack like place on the corner of 4th and Lincoln in San Rafael. There aren't any formal indoor tables although there are stools by the window and up by the counter. Locals differentiate between the two in size, calling the original location on 4th Street "the small one", some I would dream of, if I visited Puerto Rico and the second location on Lincoln Avenue, more sit down restaurant. Now they have monopolized the Peurto Rican Restaurant scene in San Rafael, if they would only branch out to Sonoma County, we'd be talking. Maybe I'm partial because I live in Sonoma County. The drive to San Rafael for SOL FOOD is worth it.
Regardless of which one you choose, Sol has successfully created two restaurants, almost three spaces that look and feel like Puerto Rico: colorful shutters and chairs, green plantains holding down stacks of napkins, and big leafy plants gracing every inch of usable counter space. Loud, lively music streams throughout the busy cafe, and one of the things I love the most are the communal tables (at the larger location). Here, you may be seated next to a teacher grading papers, an older man reading the paper, employees on a break, and tattoo artists from down the street. There aren't a lot of places around Marin where young and old, conservative and liberal, come together and chat over pink beans and rice.
If you are lucky enough to live near by, they deliver, too........
http://www.solfoodrestaurant.com/
Sol Food, Cafe (Small One/Original)
732 4th Street
San Rafael, CA 94901
(415) 451-4765
Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 7am-12am; Fri. 7am-2am; Sat. 8am-2am
Sol Food Restaurant (Big One)
903 Lincoln Avenue
San Rafael, CA 94901
(415) 451-4765 (same number as above)
Hours: Daily from 11am-10pm
On my first trip to SOL FOOD, I sampled two of the dishes off the vast menu. The first came recommended by the young lady at the register, the Tostones con queso, 5 tostones (green plantains, fried, smashed and fried again, topped with melted jack cheese and mojo (a garlic and olive oil blend), you may add fresh tomatoes or avocado to top this off. My second dish was the A La Carte, polo, (Boneless skinless Free Range Chicken thighs marinated with oregano and garlic, then baked. I also got a side of the most amazing black beans and rice. The black beans were simmered with peppers, onions and cilantro. I was in heaven. The portions are very generous and it is a great place to order several items and spilt them among your friends.
If you haven't been to Sol Food, it's owned by Sol Hernandez, an enterprising San Rafael native who decided to bring Puerto Rican food to Marin. She lived on the island for quite awhile with her boyfriend and his mother and spent her free time learning how to cook the local dishes. The original Sol Food is a tiny little almost shack like place on the corner of 4th and Lincoln in San Rafael. There aren't any formal indoor tables although there are stools by the window and up by the counter. Locals differentiate between the two in size, calling the original location on 4th Street "the small one", some I would dream of, if I visited Puerto Rico and the second location on Lincoln Avenue, more sit down restaurant. Now they have monopolized the Peurto Rican Restaurant scene in San Rafael, if they would only branch out to Sonoma County, we'd be talking. Maybe I'm partial because I live in Sonoma County. The drive to San Rafael for SOL FOOD is worth it.
Regardless of which one you choose, Sol has successfully created two restaurants, almost three spaces that look and feel like Puerto Rico: colorful shutters and chairs, green plantains holding down stacks of napkins, and big leafy plants gracing every inch of usable counter space. Loud, lively music streams throughout the busy cafe, and one of the things I love the most are the communal tables (at the larger location). Here, you may be seated next to a teacher grading papers, an older man reading the paper, employees on a break, and tattoo artists from down the street. There aren't a lot of places around Marin where young and old, conservative and liberal, come together and chat over pink beans and rice.
If you are lucky enough to live near by, they deliver, too........
http://www.solfoodrestaurant.com/
Sol Food, Cafe (Small One/Original)
732 4th Street
San Rafael, CA 94901
(415) 451-4765
Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 7am-12am; Fri. 7am-2am; Sat. 8am-2am
Sol Food Restaurant (Big One)
903 Lincoln Avenue
San Rafael, CA 94901
(415) 451-4765 (same number as above)
Hours: Daily from 11am-10pm
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)