More Fun Time! 15-Minute Chicken, Lentil & Veggie Green Wraps

This post is part of a social shopper marketing insight campaign with Pollinate Media Group®, Birds Eye®, and Tyson® but all my opinions are my own. #pmedia #FastFreshFilling http://my-disclosur.es/OBsstV

Chicken Lentil and Veggie  Green Wraps with Sriracha Ranch Dressing makes a quick and healthy summer lunch or dinner that uses the microwave!

Chicken Lentil and Veggie Green Wraps with Sriracha Ranch Dressing makes a quick and healthy summer lunch or dinner that uses the microwave!

Hey, it’s finally summertime. After months and months of frantic school year schedules, we busy parents need to cut ourselves some slack! While preparing a nutritious home-cooked meal is important for the well-being of any family, so is enjoying quality fun time together outside the kitchen. Personally, I have been spending an extra hour with the kids at the pool, gym or playing outdoor games without any worry of rushing back to get dinner going – and no, we are not ordering pizza or hitting the drive through on the way home!

Shopping for Birds Eye and Tyson at Walmart.

Shopping for Birds Eye and Tyson at Walmart.

Instead, I’m relying on the Birds Eye Steamfresh® Protein Blends and Tyson® Grilled & Ready® Chicken Breast Fillets I know are waiting in the freezer. Combined with a few other fresh ingredients in my produce bin, I have a super nutritious, protein-rich meal to serve my hungry boys in less than 15 minutes – and without turning on a hot oven or grill! My entire recipe for Chicken, Lentil & Veggie Green Wraps with Sriracha Ranch can be made entirely in the microwave. It’s so freakin’ awesome and easy that even my kids can make dinner and bring it out to me while I rest myself pool side on the chaise lounge.

I am so loving these Birds Eye Steamfresh® Protein Blends, there are four different blends that combine veggies with added protein from ingredients like lentils, beans, quinoa and such. The California blend used in my Chicken, Lentil & Veggie Green Wraps is loaded with lentils, broccoli and edamame – all which are surprisingly good sources on plant-based protein. In fact, these Birds Eye Steamfresh® Protein Blends are a great dinner solution for vegetarians.

collard wrap with product

However, my family is a bit more carnivorous – so, no surprise the fully-cooked Tyson® Grilled & Ready® Chicken Breast Fillets were a hit. These 100% all natural pieces of white meat chicken can be used creatively in countless recipes and boast appetizing, caramelized hatch marks that make each fillet look like it’s been pulled straight off the grill!

Wrapping up the chicken and lentil edamame mix in collard greens.

The recipe is so easy just add carrots to the protein blend and microwave — and reheat the chicken in the microwave too! Then pile it in fresh, raw collard greens, Swiss chard or kale and roll up!

Chicken Lentil and Veggie Collard Green Wraps with Sriracha Ranch

Eat your collard greens!

Eat your collard greens!

 

You can find both the  Birds Eye Steamfresh® Protein Blends and Tyson® Grilled & Ready® Chicken Breast Fillets products in the freezer section of Walmart. And don’t forget to get your collard greens!

 

 

 

What would you do with an extra hour of free time this summer? Do you have a go-to 15 minute meal? Please share in the comments below! XOXO Jennifer 

Chicken, Lentil & Veggie Green Wraps with Sriracha Ranch
Prep Time
5 mins
Cook Time
10 mins
Total Time
15 mins
 
Microwave a healthy quick meal in under 15 minutes and enjoy more summer fun! This paleo green wrap uses kale, chard or collard leaves, chicken and veggies!
Course: Main Dish, Salad, Vegetable
Cuisine: American
Servings: 4 people
Ingredients
  • 1 10.8 oz bag Birds Eye Steamfresh® Protein Blends – California Style
  • 1/2 cup matchstick cut carrots
  • 2 fillets Tyson® Grilled & Ready® Chicken Breast Fillets
  • 4 large leaves collard greens, Swiss Chard or kale
  • 1/2 cup prepared ranch dressing of choice
  • 1 tablespoon Sriracha Hot Pepper Sauce more or less to taste
Instructions
  1. In microwave safe bowl with lid, add protein blend veggie with carrots; toss together. Microwave for approximately 4 – 5 minutes on high, stirring halfway through.
  2. Set fillets on microwave-safe plate and microwave on “reheat” for 2 – 3 minutes or until warmed through but not scorching hot.
  3. Wash and dry four big leaves of collard greens and remove stems from below the intersection with each leaf. Also carefully cut and remove about 1” of stem up into each leaf with a paring knife – this will make “rolling” the wrap later easier.
  4. Spoon ¼ of the cooked vegetable mixture into center of each leaf, spreading out a bit while leaving plenty of room on the sides.
  5. Cut the fillets in half lengthwise to create two longer pieces of chicken. Place one piece of chicken on top of the vegetable mixture.
  6. To form wrap, fold tops and bottoms toward each other and keep secure with hands. Next, take one of the longer sides, fold over top of chicken and begin rolling into other side of leaf – secure with a toothpick. Repeat for remaining bundles.
  7. In small bowl, mix together ranch dressing and Sriracha sauce until well blended. Serve with wraps.

Making Sense of School Lunches Plus Rainbow Veggie Wraps

What’s for lunch, Mom?  Whether I’m making meals at home or packing them for school, this is one of the most pressing questions of the day from my three active boys aged 11, 14 and 16. They’re old enough now to make their own food choices and I am hoping and praying that my role modeling and introduction of healthy options over the years is finally paying off. It’s not realistic to think we’re going to eat clean day in and day out, but keeping the fridge and pantry stocked with nutritious options helps us get closer to that goal.

jennifer fisher litehouse rainbow wrap open

If I’ve prepped an assortment of fresh produce, one of their favorite lunches to make (and eat) are these vibrant Rainbow Veggie Wraps. A whole-grain tortilla and lower-fat cheese serves as the backdrop for a spectrum of colorful vegetables – and, the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow wrap is the satisfaction of watching these once-picky veggie protesters elbow each other out of the way for seconds.  The kids like to eat these along with hard-boiled eggs for a protein boost. I might sneak in some Quinoa-Almond-Oat Chocolate Chip Cookies for a treat.

smart cookies thefitfork.com

I blogged about this Rainbow Veggie Wrap recipe at the Litehouse Food’s blog, Living Litehouse, in honor of National School Lunch Week.  School lunches are only as healthy as the food actually eaten – meaning, there is absolutely NO nutritional value in healthy food that is placed on a tray or packed in a lunch box if it is thrown away!

photo credit: New York Times

photo credit: New York Times

New government mandates regarding school lunches, albeit well-intentioned, are missing the mark in some cafeterias.  Yes, reducing sodium and fats while increasing consumption of whole grains, fruits and veggies is a good thing. But, if it is presented in a way that is unappealing to a kid or caters to more mature taste buds, it’s just not going to be touched with a 10-foot pole. And, that’s a scary fact considering these same mandates also place limits on the maximum allowable calories in school lunches – elementary (650 calories), middle (700) and high school (850). I’m not sure how my still growing, over 6-foot tall, 16 year old son who runs cross country in the morning would make it through class dismissal at 4pm without major stomach grumblings.  I hope he’s not throwing any of his lunch away. Does one size meal really fit all? Do I really have to send him with additional money to hit the snack bar . . . . for junk that’s allowable because it’s not tallied into the federal reimbursement record?  Sometimes all he wants is just an extra carton of milk.

But, definitely not all school cafeterias are blindly and blandly following the new federal mandates.  Thanks to a new friend at School Meals That Rock, my eyes have been opened to districts that are very progressive when it comes to feeding our kids. From organic gardens that bear the proverbial fruit in many ways (hands-on learning, active engagement with the meal being served, and the obvious healthy fuel) to farm-to-fork initiatives and practical “build your own” salad bars, there are plenty of good things happening in school nutrition.

I'd totally eat this hummus grab-and-go salad!

I’d totally eat this hummus grab-and-go salad!

Obviously, school nutrition is a complicated issue and there is no one perfect solution. However, it certainly deserves my attention considering that approximately one in three American kids or teens is overweight or obese (nearly triple the rate in 1963) and increasing numbers of children are relying on free or reduced priced meals for their main sustenance of the day. As a mother, who is blessed with the resources to do so, I’m going to keep on stocking up with healthy foods for packing lunches from home, keep my kids involved in and educated about what goes into their lunches so there’s a higher chance that they’ll actually eat it. And, when it’s Taco Day or Pizza Day (on a whole grain crust, natch) at school, I’ll let them partake should they choose. My district is doing a pretty good job, but I’d be happy to share my ideas – nudge, nudge, wink, wink!

Don’t forget to visit Living Litehouse for the Rainbow Veggie Wrap Recipe!

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