Last night the boys and I made chicken, bean & cheese quesadillas to go with our guac, and a Waldorf salad. As a I said above, the guac is really easy to throw together. Two avocados, the juice from half a lime, and a 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Mix it all up, and bam. Guacamole.
Once we had that done, we moved on to the Waldorf salad. So I looked it up and I guess technically what we made isn't quite a Waldorf salad. According to wikipedia, a Waldorf salad is:
"a fruit and nut salad generally made of fresh apples, celery, grapes and walnuts, dressed in mayonnaise, and served on a bed of lettuce."
Now we checked the apple box, the walnut box and the lettuce box, but our salad didn't have celery, grapes, or mayo (we used a store-bought balsamic vinaigrette) and we sprinkled some feta cheese on there as well (the cookbook recommended bleu cheese). Honestly I don't know that I'd like the traditional Waldorf, and I know that my non-mayonnaise-loving wife would prefer the vinaigrette dressing. Waldorf or not, I thought the salad turned out pretty good.
So when we cut up the apples for our salad, I tried our apple corer/slicer. The results were somewhat mixed. I feel like it shouldn't take my full bodyweight to force a slicer through an apple, but there we were. I was able to get through it eventually, but I don't know that it really saved me any time. Fun to try new things though.
1) Make sure the tortillas you use aren't too big as it makes them really difficult to flip
2) The more things you put in a quesadilla, the heavier it becomes, and the harder it is to flip
So the flipping wasn't especially pretty, but we got them made, and they tasted decent with the guac. If we do the recipe again, I think the main thing we'd do different is using smaller shells. Overall though, not a bad dinner.
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