Dinner time rolled around, and I was determined to cook something simple, quick and, most importantly, comforting. I had grabbed a couple sweet potatoes at the co-op on kind of a whim earlier, and lately I've been trying to eat based on which produce is going to kick it first so as not to waste anything. The result hit the spot:

Ingredients: spinach, canned chickpeas, garlic (I used pre-minced, for convenience sake), a sweet potato, freshly ground black pepper, liquid aminos, butter
Sweet Potato: Here I used about a pounder, but it was long and skinny so I cut it in half and stuck the other half in the fridge after cooking. Poked a bunch of holes in it with a sharp knife, put on a baking pan in the toaster oven at 400 degrees for about 45 minutes or so. I didn't really time it, just poked it with a fork to ensure tenderness through and through. Cut down the middle, and put the teeniest amount of butter you can manage on either side.
Spinach and Chickpeas: I always cook this over very low heat because I do not like overcooked greens. I used a cast-iron skillet with a bit of cooking spray on medium-low or something. We have a gas stove for the first time and I'm still figuring that shit out. I put a TON of garlic in this, mainly because I'm of the belief that you can really never have too much garlic. Seriously, like 2 heaping spoonfuls. I would say I used about have a pound of spinach but I'm not even sure. Get that going, sprinkle a little liquid aminos on there, and then pepper the shit out of it. Once it's nearly done (almost all leaves are getting wilty) throw in about 1/3 a can of chickpeas. They're already cooked so you just need to heat them. Finally, once you have the spinach/chickpea mixture in a serving bowl or on your plate, top with a teeny tiny pat of butter. You could even throw this on top of the sweet potato instead of serving side by side if you wanted to get fancy.
Typically, I NEVER use butter in a recipe, for a host of reasons: it's caloric content, the fact that I've been blessed with genes that ensure that cholesterol plasters itself all over my arteries, the dubious practices of the dairy industry. Here I used less than a teaspoon of organic locally produced butter, helping quell my guilt. You could absolutely omit it here and still have an awesome meal, but I think the butter is what took this meal from delicious to comforting for me. Still not "comfort food" by many people's standards, but it certainly turned my day around!
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