Chicken salad in the slow cooker? This recipe from The Dinner Mom is so genius we wish we’d thought of it ourselves. It’ll be delicious when freshly made, and works well as a packed lunch, too.

Ingredients
2 pounds boneless, skinless chicken breast
Salt and pepper to taste
8 ounces cream cheese
1 tablespoon tarragon dried
1/4 cup Greek yogurt or low-fat sour cream
1 cup diced celery
1 cup slivered almonds
1 cup cranberries (leave out for very low-carb version)

Method
1. Spray the inside of the slow cooker with cooking spray.

2. Season chicken breast with salt and pepper and place in slow cooker.

3. Sprinkle tarragon over the top of the chicken.

4. Cut cream cheese into cubes and place on top of chicken.

5. Cover slow cooker and cook on high for about 4 hours or on low for 6-8 hours.

6. Open slow cooker and shred chicken with two forks, mixing in melted cream cheese.

7. Remove chicken base to serving dish.

8. Stir in sour cream, celery, almonds and cranberries.

9. We used a 1/4 cup scoop like this to serve. Enjoy!

Thanks to Marjory of The Dinner Mom for sharing this recipe and photo with us. Check out her website for more clean and healthy recipes that your whole family will love.

photo: Bread & Cie

January 30th is National Croissant Day and we’re saying”Oui! Oui!” to celebrating the buttery, flaky French pastry that everyone loves. Croissants are perfectly divine on their own, but they can also be filled with everything from chocolate and almond paste to ham and cheese. We’ve toured the city to find the most mouthwatering croissants this side of Paris. Read on to see where to say “Bon Appétit” to this versatile culinary delight and to learn about a local baker’s new spin called the Froissant™!

photo: Renee G. via Yelp

Le Parfait Paris
With two main locations in Little Italy and Liberty Public Market, Le Parfait Paris serves up croissants every way imaginable. They’ve got plain, with almond filling, with chocolate filling, with almond and chocolate filling… or perhaps you’re in the mood for something more substantial? They also serve croissant sandwiches, including the Alsacien (Swiss cheese, eggs, Canadian bacon) and Saumon (smoked salmon, red onions, capers, cream cheese).

Le Parfait Paris
555 G St.
San Diego, Ca 92101
619-245-4457

2820 Historic Decatur Rd.
San Diego, Ca 92106
619-245-4457
Online: leparfaitparis.com

 

photo: Bread & Cie

Bread & Cie
This Hillcrest mainstay has a huge array of fresh bread and pastries, including several mouthwatering croissants. In addition to the plain, they also serve almond, chocolate, chocolate and almond, and cinnamon. All are made fresh by hand each day with only the best European butter (which contains more butterfat, meaning it melts faster, meaning your croissant is unbelievably flaky). Paired with a cup of coffee, it’s a great start to any day.

Bread & Cie
350 University Ave.
San Diego, Ca 92103
619-683-9322
Online: breadandcie.com

photo: Cardamom Cafe and Bakery via Facebook

Cardamom Cafe and Bakery
Is 11 a.m. late breakfast or early lunch? At Cardamom you can make it both. Pick up one of their outstanding almond croissants (named the best in town by San Diego Magazine) as a late-morning snack, but don’t leave before trying one of their famous stuffed croissant sandwiches. Two options include chicken salad with tarragon dressing and the Messy Grilled Cheese with basil and roasted tomato spread. But the great news here is that any of their sandwiches can be made to order as a stuffed croissant.

2977 Upas St.
San Diego, Ca 92104
619-546-5609
Online: cardamomsandiego.com

photo: Extraordinary Desserts

Extraordinary Desserts
Just when you thought a croissant couldn’t get any more decadent, this popular San Diego dessert spot does something, well, extraordinary. Meet the Froissant™. Owner Karen Krasne said the inspiration came from her love of almond croissants and warm glazed donuts. Her genius invention is a flaky croissant, deep fried and rolled in vanilla bean sugar, before being filled with rich vanilla custard. Sounds like magic!

Extraordinary Desserts
2929 Fifth Ave.
San Diego, Ca 92103
619-294-2132

1430 Union St.
San Diego, Ca 92101
619-294-7001
Online: extraordinarydesserts.com

photo: Petite Madeline via Facebook

Petite Madeline
Located just blocks from the beach in Oceanside, this bistro and bakery is a popular spot for a post-surfing refuel. Their croissants are made in-house using a traditional method that takes three days. The care is obvious the moment you bite into one of their flaky pastries. If you need something more substantial, their Breakfast Croissant Sandwich comes loaded with eggs, ham and cheese or spinach and feta.

Petite Madeline
223 N. Coast Highway
Oceanside, Ca 92054
760-231-7300
Online: petitemadelinebakery.com

Tell us your favorite spot to pick up a croissant in the comments! 

—Michelle Franklin

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Baby food used to be simple. You had your bananas — just bananas — you had your peas, and you spoon-fed them to your little one a jar at a time. Nothing fancy. Today, baby food is gourmet. Whether you’re steaming and pureeing the equivalent of a Thanksgiving feast or Googling “can babies eat liver?” (answer: a little), your baby is probably eating better than you were until your mid-twenties.

Even the purees on the grocery store shelf sound like something you’d order at the hot new organic lunch spot. But do these adventurous flavor combos actually live up to their promise? We taste-tested the five most grownup-sounding pouches of organic baby mush we could find — and let our nine-month-old foodie weigh in, too.

Happy Baby: sweet peas, green beans & spinach with quinoa & chicken broth
Mom’s verdict: This brownish concoction has very liquid-y texture, like soup. To us it tasted neither good nor bad — just kind of neutral and somewhat pea-like.

Baby’s verdict: A budding vegetarian, perhaps? He gave a slight nose wrinkle at his first bite and then caught on to the flavor of this one fast. We also tried mixing it with oatmeal and homemade sweet potatoes — no protests on either front.

Nutritional perk: low in sugar, high in Vitamin A

BUY NOW

Oh Baby Foods: LavenBerry
Mom’s verdict: A simple list of five main ingredients (apples, beets, cranberries, lavender flower and Vitamin C) made for a bright, uncomplicated overall flavor. We couldn’t really taste the most unexpected one — lavender flower — but it sounded nice.

Baby’s verdict: As with most sweet things, he was totally fine with it and tore through the pouch in about five minutes flat, leaning in for more when we tried to take it away.

BUY NOW

Earth’s Best: pumpkin cranberry apple
Mom’s verdict: We’d paint a whole room the bright pink color of this puree. So pretty. The taste is super tart— we mostly noticed cranberry — and sweet, but not overly so. It’s nice. We’d eat it for dessert with chocolate cake.

Baby’s verdict: He loved this on its own and also mixed into whole-grain cereal for extra color and flavor. Didn’t spit out a drop or even wrinkle his nose.

Nutritional perk: 45% daily value of Vitamin C

BUY NOW

Plum Organics: quinoa & leeks with chicken & tarragon
Mom’s verdict: We’d rather eat this meal in its actual form. The mustardy color and earthy smell weren’t so appealing, but the taste — kind of like gravy — was okay. The top ingredients listed on the back of the pouch are actually carrot, sweet potato and corn puree, so we wouldn’t exactly call this our baby’s first encounter with leeks.

Baby’s verdict: Major nose wrinkle and eye crinkle paired with confused open-mouth chewing. He got used to it after a couple of bites, though, and ate the rest of the pouch without incident.

Nutritional perk: 4g of protein

BUY NOW

Sprout: peas, brown rice, white beans & kale
Mom’s verdict: Kale? We were impressed to find it in baby food. But mostly this pouch tastes and smells like the canned peas we used to eat as kids. We definitely got a sense of the white beans being mushed up in there, too. Eh. We’d rather make a hearty stew out of these ingredients.

Baby’s verdict: A little lip-smacking at the thick texture. A look up at me like, “Mom, what’s this?” Then happily ate all subsequent bites.

Nutritional perk: 3g of fiber

BUY NOW

 

What is YOUR baby’s favorite puree? Let us know in the Comments!

— Amalie Drury

From Lummi to Orcas to Bainbridge, the Seattle area islands are chock full of destination-worthy dining perfect for a Seattle date night out. Lucky for you, the folks at Seattle Magazine have pulled the most delicious dining spots on each island. They’ve even sussed out the best arts and music events at theaters, galleries and public parks so your island adventure is a true date night. What are you waiting for?

Wind at the Willows
One of Denmark’s hottest chefs breezes into Willows Inn in the San Juans.

In the November issue of Seattle magazine, I broke the thrilling news that chef Blaine Wetzel, former sous-chef at Noma (the Copenhagen restaurant named the best in the world this year by the San Pellegrino Café Society), was moving to Lummi Island to head the kitchen at the Willows Inn. Noma chef René Redzepi is exceptional in his studied and historical approach to cooking the foods that grow just around Copenhagen, and in his respect for time and place. And so it follows that Wetzel, Redzepi’s protégé (and maybe the most focused 25-year-old I’ve ever met), makes daily foraging trips to pluck edible flower buds from salmonberry bushes and cherry trees around the quaint inn’s property, which he later plants in brown butter spread atop homemade crackers (a truly sensational dish that is like taking a bite of blooming springtime); he visits nearby farms to select the lambs he’ll have slaughtered for his spring menus; and he chooses each variety of beet, lettuce and potato that is planted in the Willows’ nearby farm. Willows’ owner, Riley Starks, is like-minded, though he exudes a looser, milder confidence earned from the 12 years he’s owned the inn. But make no mistake: Starks is as focused on food as Wetzel. He’s raising a Kurobuta pig (for future prosciutto and bacon), he can tell you about the personalities of each variety of turkey he raises, and he spends the summer months catching every salmon served at the restaurant.

But who cares about all of that business? What you really want to know is if it’s worth your time and money to schlep all the way up to tiny Lummi Island (a seven-minute ferry ride from Bellingham) for dinner. And to that I say, oh yes, indeed. The 12-dish menu (including five entrées; $85) is prefaced by five “tastes”; essentially tiny, one-bite appetizers. And they are lovely. Sight, smell, taste, touch, sound: Every sense is drawn to the meal as each table in the sparely decorated, perfectly comfortable, hushed dining room (with its awesome westerly view of the sunset and the silver waters below) makes the same discovery: A small bentwood box (custom-made for Wetzel by an island woodworker, naturally) is presented like a gift, wafting tiny trails of alder smoke. Open it, and, ah! Smoldering wood chips sit beneath two hunks of exquisite smoked salmon. Magic. And then two oysters, still briny with seawater, set upon frozen beach rocks. A beet encrusted with seeds planted upon a smooth, earthy tarragon pesto. A hunk of pork shoulder, transcendent and tender, plated with onions so recently plucked off a hot grill that they trace their irresistible scent across the room. Wetzel, at such a young age, does what so many great chefs take decades to learn: He reaps what the earth is giving at each moment and nudges it to greatness with as few bells and whistles as possible.

Of course you should stay at the quaint, comfortable inn afterwards, choosing a cozy bedroom just behind the restaurant to fall into after dinner ($155) or, if a splurge is in order, one of the beach units located about a 10-minute walk away and mere feet from the breaking waves (from $285). Why rush back to reality before it’s necessary?

ALSO ON THE ISLAND:
Michael Oppenheimer’s Windy Hill Art sculpture park is as inviting as it is quaint. Open daily from dawn until dusk, the park offers eight acres of fields and forests strewn with kinetic sculptures designed to interact with the environment—whether that be rain, wind or humans. Perfect for an afternoon or an entire day; Bring a picnic and linger. 1825 S Nugent Road; windyhillart.com

To discover more mouth-watering destination-worthy dining click here.

This is our weekly guest post from our friends at Seattle Magazine, which keeps readers on the pulse of restaurants, personalities, arts, entertainment and culture that reflect the tapestry of our dynamic landscape. We’ve teamed up for an exciting partnership to bring you a weekly dose of fantastic Date Night ideas throughout greater Seattle.