Sautéed Collards and Onions
Sautéed Collards and Onions might be just the side dish you are searching for. This recipe covers 29% of your daily requirements of vitamins and minerals. This recipe serves 12. One serving contains 105 calories, 7g of protein, and 4g of fat. From preparation to the plate, this recipe takes about 45 minutes. Head to the store and pick up collard greens, garlic cloves, salt, and a few other things to make it today. It is a good option if you're following a gluten free, whole 30, and vegan diet.
Instructions
Remove stems from collard greens. Wash leaves thoroughly; pat dry, and coarsely chop to equal 20 cups.
Bring 4 quarts water to a boil in a large stockpot; add half of the chopped greens, and cook for 4 minutes.
Remove the greens with a slotted spoon, draining them well. Repeat the procedure with remaining chopped greens, and discard the water.
Heat oil in stockpot over medium heat.
Add onion and garlic; saut 3 minutes or until tender.
Add greens and salt; saut 3 minutes or until tender.
Recommended wine: Riesling, Sparkling Wine, Zinfandel
Southern can be paired with Riesling, Sparkling Wine, and Zinfandel. In general, there are a few rules that will help you pair wine with southern food. Food-friendly riesling or sparkling white wine will work with many fried foods, while zinfandel is great with barbecued fare. You could try Von Winning Winnings Riesling. Reviewers quite like it with a 4 out of 5 star rating and a price of about 20 dollars per bottle.
![Von Winning Winnings Riesling]()
Von Winning Winnings Riesling
If you loved the 2014 — and if you didn't, we need to send out a search party for your heart — you’ll find this one happy, happy, happy. Stronger than '14, it's also both drier and richer. And that’s as it should be; the pittance of sweetness it contains will rise and fall with the structure of each year's wine, because that's what sensible vintners do. The others just set up a formula and the wine"“has—XY— grams of sugar and zat's zat." Not Winnings Riesling. This will always be teasingly dry and teasingly sweet so you’ll keep changing your mind ("Wait, it's a dry wine, no, it's a sweet wine, no wait, it's a dry wine again….") while the bottle empties faster than you could have imagined.