Mmmmm, aborted floral meristems.
I like cauliflower. A great, easy way to make a tasty cauliflower dish is to roast it. Little preparation is needed.
Indian Spiced Roasted Cauliflower:
1 head cauliflower, chopped into your favorite sized portions
1 T vegetable oil
1/2 tsp Madras curry powder
1/2 tsp sambar powder
1/2 tsp garam masala
salt to taste
Combine all ingredients and roast at 400F, 30-40 minutes, until starting to brown.
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Pizza: Baked at home in 3 minutes
I like pizza.
I am usually dissatisfied with homemade pizza results. The crust usually isn't cooked completely or burns if I wait for the top side to finish. I knew that if I had a pizza stone things could be different. Pizza stones seem pricey for what they are: a stone. I knew to make a better pizza I needed heat from above and below, enter cast iron skillet.
Dough (2 - 10 inch pizzas):
1 1/4 C AP Flour
1 C Whole Wheat Flour
2 1/4 tsp Active Dry Yeast
1/2 tsp Salt
1 T Oil
1 T Sugar
1 C Water
Sauce:
1 C Tomato Puree
1 T Olive Oil
1/2 tsp Italian Seasoning
Toppings:
Cheese, cherry tomatoes and bell peppers.
Process:
Mix warm water (~100F), yeast and sugar together. Lets stand for 5 minutes. Combine dry ingredients. Add oil to yeast mixture. Add this to dry ingredients. Knead. Set aside covered until doubled in volume. Deflate, let stand, covered another 30 minutes.
Meanwhile begin to heat a 10 inch cast iron skillet over a high flame and preheat broiler. Split the dough into two. Shape dough into a 10 inch round.. After 10 minutes of heating, 'drop' the dough into the cast iron pan Immediately sauce and top the pizza. Place pan under broiler and watch for done-ness 2-3 minutes. Carefully remove from broiler and pan.
Note: I sauced and topped before transferring to cast iron pan once. When I did I had spillage. It also makes it easier to get a thin crust off my cutting board (no pizza peel for me) without the encumbrance of toppings/sauce.
![]() |
| Quick Cooking Pizza at Home |
I am usually dissatisfied with homemade pizza results. The crust usually isn't cooked completely or burns if I wait for the top side to finish. I knew that if I had a pizza stone things could be different. Pizza stones seem pricey for what they are: a stone. I knew to make a better pizza I needed heat from above and below, enter cast iron skillet.
Dough (2 - 10 inch pizzas):
1 1/4 C AP Flour
1 C Whole Wheat Flour
2 1/4 tsp Active Dry Yeast
1/2 tsp Salt
1 T Oil
1 T Sugar
1 C Water
Sauce:
1 C Tomato Puree
1 T Olive Oil
1/2 tsp Italian Seasoning
Toppings:
Cheese, cherry tomatoes and bell peppers.
Process:
Mix warm water (~100F), yeast and sugar together. Lets stand for 5 minutes. Combine dry ingredients. Add oil to yeast mixture. Add this to dry ingredients. Knead. Set aside covered until doubled in volume. Deflate, let stand, covered another 30 minutes.
Meanwhile begin to heat a 10 inch cast iron skillet over a high flame and preheat broiler. Split the dough into two. Shape dough into a 10 inch round.. After 10 minutes of heating, 'drop' the dough into the cast iron pan Immediately sauce and top the pizza. Place pan under broiler and watch for done-ness 2-3 minutes. Carefully remove from broiler and pan.
![]() |
| Pizza |
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Bubble and Squeak Meets Ethiopia
I don't eat enough cabbage. I am usually afraid that I won't be able to eat a whole head before it turns, or I turn on it. However, one of my favorite recipes for cabbage is bubble and squeak. It reminds me of Tikil Gomen. I deciced to use my homemade cold-pressed canola oil based niter kibbeh and berbere for the seasoning. I also don't have leftovers from (seitan) roast dinners often, so I make it fresh. Also for little more sumtin sumtin I added some chopped homemade, baked tofu. I cook mine in a 10 in cast-iron skillet.
Recipe:
1 head green cabbage, chopped
1 large onion, sliced
1 lb chopped carrots
4 large russet potatoes, chopped
8 oz chopped baked tofu
4 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 C niter kibbeh, halved
1 - 2 T berbere
Boil potatoes and carrots separately until just soft. Drain and set aside. Fry onion in half of the niter kibbeh until soft. Add berbere. Add cabbage and cook for 10 minutes. Add garlic and tofu. Add carrots and potatoes. Add remaining niter kibeh. Crudely mash. Try not to turn until browned bits form. Mix it up occasionally. Cook until the browned sections are too your liking. Adjust salt and pepper as necessary.
Recipe:
1 head green cabbage, chopped
1 large onion, sliced
1 lb chopped carrots
4 large russet potatoes, chopped
8 oz chopped baked tofu
4 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 C niter kibbeh, halved
1 - 2 T berbere
Boil potatoes and carrots separately until just soft. Drain and set aside. Fry onion in half of the niter kibbeh until soft. Add berbere. Add cabbage and cook for 10 minutes. Add garlic and tofu. Add carrots and potatoes. Add remaining niter kibeh. Crudely mash. Try not to turn until browned bits form. Mix it up occasionally. Cook until the browned sections are too your liking. Adjust salt and pepper as necessary.
Labels:
berbere,
bubble and squeak,
ethiopian,
niter kibbeh,
vegan
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Spiced Carrot Dip
I recently have been enjoying a spiced carrot dip. This is my attempt at recreating something I ate at a farmers market in Monterrey.
Recipe (yields about 2 cups):
1 lb carrots
1 clove garlic
1/2 - 2 tsp sweetener (e.g. sugar, honey, agave) [depends on the sweetness of the carrots]
1 T olive oil
1/2 tsp each cumin, ginger, chile
1/4 tsp each cinnamon, cayenne (or less depending on heat/spice tolerance)
2 - 4 T orange juice (may substitute 1 - 2 T lime or lemon juice)
salt and pepper to taste
Boil carrots with garlic clove until tender. Remove and add carrots and garlic to food processor, reserve cooking water. Process with other ingredients until smooth. Adjust thickness to desired consistency via cooking water and/or juice additions.
Serve warm or cold with dipping agents (e.g. pita chips, pretzels, pea pods).
Recipe (yields about 2 cups):
1 lb carrots
1 clove garlic
1/2 - 2 tsp sweetener (e.g. sugar, honey, agave) [depends on the sweetness of the carrots]
1 T olive oil
1/2 tsp each cumin, ginger, chile
1/4 tsp each cinnamon, cayenne (or less depending on heat/spice tolerance)
2 - 4 T orange juice (may substitute 1 - 2 T lime or lemon juice)
salt and pepper to taste
Boil carrots with garlic clove until tender. Remove and add carrots and garlic to food processor, reserve cooking water. Process with other ingredients until smooth. Adjust thickness to desired consistency via cooking water and/or juice additions.
Serve warm or cold with dipping agents (e.g. pita chips, pretzels, pea pods).
Monday, August 23, 2010
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Garden Fresh Gazpacho
![]() | ||
| Gratuitous Gazpacho Close-Up |
I made some Gazpacho utilizing the harvest's from my garden.
Gazpacho (serves 6):
1 cucumber: peeled, seeded and chopped
2 poblano chiles: seeded and chopped
1/2 onion: finely chopped
1 clove garlic: minced
2 cups halved cherry tomatoes
2 large tomatoes chopped
2 cups tomato juice
1/3 cup chopped fresh basil
1 tsp dry oregano
2 T red wine vinegar
1 tsp hot sauce
juice of 1 lime
salt and pepper to taste
Combine all ingredients. Remove a third of the gazpacho and blend and return, or blend in-situ with immersion blender. Adjust consistency with tomato juice to your liking. Chill before serving.
Friday, July 30, 2010
Friday, June 11, 2010
Let the Harvest Begin
The First Harvest of 2010 (not including lemons from the Winter):
Radishes of the French Breakfast persuasion:
Radishes of the French Breakfast persuasion:
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Biscuits and Gravy
![]() |
| V*gan Biscuits and Gravy |
Biscuits and Gravy:
Seitan Sausage (adapted from Vegan Dad):
- 1/2 C refried beans
- 1/2 C vegetable broth
- 1/2 C vegetable broth
- 1/2 C apple juice
- 2 T tahini
- 3 T soy sauce
- 2 T tahini
- 3 T soy sauce
- 1/2 tsp ground fenugreek
- 1 tsp garlic powder
- 1 tsp garlic powder
- 2 tsp onion powder
- 1 1/4 C vital gluten
- 1/3 C nutritional yeast
- 1 1/4 C vital gluten
- 1/3 C nutritional yeast
- 1 T light miso
- 1 tsp each thyme and sage ground in mortar and pestle
- 1/4 tsp cayenne
- 1 tsp smoked paprika
- 1 tsp each thyme and sage ground in mortar and pestle
- 1/4 tsp cayenne
- 1 tsp smoked paprika
Combine all ingredients except gluten. Then mix in gluten with spoon. Once well combined form the mixture into 10 portions. Roll them into sausages. Wrap in foil. Then steam for 25 minutes. When cool enough to handle chop one cup of sausage.
Biscuits ~ 15:
- 2 C all-purpose flour
- 1 T baking powder
- 1/4 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/3 C vegetable shortening
- 1 C milk curdled with 1 T lemon juice
Preheat oven to 425 F. Mix dry ingredients. Cut in shortening until the mixture resembles crumbs. Mix in curdled milk until the flour is moistened. Turn dough onto floured surface. Knead for one minute. Push the down into a circle approximately 3/4 inch thick. Cut dough with a 2 inch biscuit cutter. Place biscuits, slightly separated, onto a greased cookie sheet and bake for 15 - 17 minutes or until golden brown.
- 2 C all-purpose flour
- 1 T baking powder
- 1/4 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/3 C vegetable shortening
- 1 C milk curdled with 1 T lemon juice
Preheat oven to 425 F. Mix dry ingredients. Cut in shortening until the mixture resembles crumbs. Mix in curdled milk until the flour is moistened. Turn dough onto floured surface. Knead for one minute. Push the down into a circle approximately 3/4 inch thick. Cut dough with a 2 inch biscuit cutter. Place biscuits, slightly separated, onto a greased cookie sheet and bake for 15 - 17 minutes or until golden brown.
Gravy:
2 1/4 C milk (of your choice) warmed 1 tsp onion powder
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
dash of cayenne
2 T flour
2 T butter, margarine, oil
Heat fat until liquid over medium heat. Add in flour and whisk constantly until the mixture smells nutty. Whisk in milk until no lumps remain. Add remaining ingredients. Whisk often until gravy reaches a boil. Then add 1 cup chopped sausage. Remove from heat. Serve over biscuits.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
I've been cooking, but have done a poor job documenting it.
I have been making my own whole wheat sandwich bread for the last couple months (with and without my own sourdough culture).
And other stuff.
I made the dosa below sometime ago. I used long grain white rice and red lentils (tandoor dal). I googled dosa and then combined, tweaked the recipes to then mostly make-up my own. I did ferment it over night. They were tasty, but probably a little thick.
And other stuff.
I made the dosa below sometime ago. I used long grain white rice and red lentils (tandoor dal). I googled dosa and then combined, tweaked the recipes to then mostly make-up my own. I did ferment it over night. They were tasty, but probably a little thick.
| Dosa - A Southern India Delight |
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Super Easy Broccoli Soup with Seitan Meatballs
A while ago I saw a television cooking program hosted by Gordon Ramsay. His recipe for broccoli soup was incredibly simple. It was broccoli, water and salt. I decided to make something very similar. I had made some seitan sausages that were lacking flavor, so I decided to reinvent them as meatballs. The results were great.
Broccoli Soup ~ 3 servings
1 lb broccoli, coarsely chopped
1 T salt
1 T olive oil
1/2 tsp fresh ground black pepper
2 T yogurt
Bring 8 cups of water to boil with salt. Add broccoli and cook until tender. Remove broccoli from water and put in blender. Add about 2 cups of water from the boil. Blend. Add pepper, oil and yogurt. Season to taste and add cooking water to achieve desired thickness.
Seitan balls (6):
1 C shredded seitan ( I used the grating disk on my food processor)
1/4 C cracker crumbs
1/4 C gluten
2 T flax seeds blended in 1/4 C water
1 T soy sauce
2 T ketchup
1 tsp Italian seasonsings
Form into balls and bake on slightly greased sheet at 350F for about 30 minutes or until slightly browned, flipping once.
Broccoli Soup ~ 3 servings
1 lb broccoli, coarsely chopped
1 T salt
1 T olive oil
1/2 tsp fresh ground black pepper
2 T yogurt
Bring 8 cups of water to boil with salt. Add broccoli and cook until tender. Remove broccoli from water and put in blender. Add about 2 cups of water from the boil. Blend. Add pepper, oil and yogurt. Season to taste and add cooking water to achieve desired thickness.
Seitan balls (6):
1 C shredded seitan ( I used the grating disk on my food processor)
1/4 C cracker crumbs
1/4 C gluten
2 T flax seeds blended in 1/4 C water
1 T soy sauce
2 T ketchup
1 tsp Italian seasonsings
Form into balls and bake on slightly greased sheet at 350F for about 30 minutes or until slightly browned, flipping once.
Labels:
broccoli soup,
seitan,
seitan meatballs,
vegan,
vegetarian
Friday, February 19, 2010
Apple Juice'd Tofu and Eggplant !! An Chinese Take-Out Inspired Dish
I like to make things that remind me of Chinese take-out. This usually involves sweet and salty. Homemade Americanized-Chinese food lends itself to orange-something, but I find that if I use orange juice from-the-carton and cook it I don't necessarily like it. I am also not keen on using / preparing fresh squeezed. However, I usually have apple juice on hand and I like the way it tastes when cooked.
Recipe:
10 oz marinated and baked tofu
1 large eggplant, diced, salted for 30 minutes, rinsed
1 red pepper chopped
1 onion chopped
3 cloves garlic chopped
1 inch of ginger peeled and minced
1 tsp sesame oil
1 T vegetable oil
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
2/3 C Apple Juice
1 - 2 T soy sauce
3-4 T chopped cilantro
Saute onions for 5 minutes in vegetable oil. Add eggplant and cook for 5 minutes. Add garlic, ginger and red pepper flakes and cook for one minute. Add the remaining ingredients and cook about 5 more minutes until the apple juice has reduced by about half. Take off heat and add cilantro. Serve over your favorite whole grain.
Recipe:
10 oz marinated and baked tofu
1 large eggplant, diced, salted for 30 minutes, rinsed
1 red pepper chopped
1 onion chopped
3 cloves garlic chopped
1 inch of ginger peeled and minced
1 tsp sesame oil
1 T vegetable oil
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
2/3 C Apple Juice
1 - 2 T soy sauce
3-4 T chopped cilantro
Saute onions for 5 minutes in vegetable oil. Add eggplant and cook for 5 minutes. Add garlic, ginger and red pepper flakes and cook for one minute. Add the remaining ingredients and cook about 5 more minutes until the apple juice has reduced by about half. Take off heat and add cilantro. Serve over your favorite whole grain.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Salt Risen / Rising Bread - Round 3: Success
Clostridium perfringens: a Gram-positive, rod-shaped, anaerobic, spore-forming bacterium of the genus Clostridium. In the United Kingdom and United States, C. perfringens bacteria are the third-most-common cause of food-borne illness. It also is responsible for the flavor and rising of Salt Risen Bread.
Does this sound tasty to you? It did to me. If so, continue on:
Background:
Once upon a time I was reading about sourdough starters and I came across salt risen / rising bread. There were some details, etc but what really caught my attention was where the fermentation was described as smelling like rotten cheese and that the bread was supposed to sorta, kinda taste like cheese. I was sold. I tried and failed. Now, about a year later I am at it again with all sorts of ideas that are not rooted in experience or know-how.
Recipe:
Starter:
1 T organic polenta
1/4 C organic whole wheat flour
1/4 C organic cornmeal
1/2 tsp kosher salt
1 tsp sugar
1 1/3 C water (I boiled it and then waited for the temperature to fall to 140F)
- Combine all ingredients, cover and keep near 100F for 8 - 16 hours. When its bubbling and some of the ingredients have formed a 'cloud' over the rest, its time to make the sponge.
Sponge:
Starter
1 C milk or water at ~ 115F
2 C AP flour
1/4 tsp kosher salt
2 T sugar
- Mix to combine and cover. Keep at ~ 100F until it approximately doubles in volume. Took about 4 hours for me.
Bread:
Sponge
4 C AP Flour
1/2 C shortening
3/4 tsp kosher salt
Mix everything knead for about 5 minutes by hand. Shape and let rise in bread pans covered until double in volume. (I may have not waited long enough for double ~ I was at about 3 hours of rising time). Bake at 375F for 30 - 40 minutes until golden brown.
Notes:
I used a heating pad placed inside of closed coller to keep the starter warm. FYI: Leaving a heating pad on all the time is, perhaps, a bad idea. My cooler wasn't big enough for the starter or the dough in loaf pans. To keep these stages warm I put them in my oven on top of the heating pad and I would heat up a cast iron skillet on my stove top for about 10 minutes and then place in the oven about every hour or so to keep it cozy.
It really did smell pretty rank during the process. Which I delighted in mostly because it was nature and science at work. According to the tasters it had a cheese-y flavor. If you are concerned about the whole bacteria thing check out this medical journal article (PDF LINK - Page 28), from what I gather they deem it safe, but please feel free to make your own decision. There was a marked time investment to a successful load and it was delicious, but I am not sure I'll be making again it any time soon. Overall I had fun making the bread and getting to tell people its risen by "food poisoning".
Labels:
appalachian bread,
salt risen bread,
salt rising bread,
v*gan,
vegan,
vegetarian
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Salt Risen / Rising Bread Round 2: Failure
I didn't get the raisin/risin'/starter to start.
Round 3 already under way.
Round 3 already under way.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Baked: Seitan Bacon
The taste: Delicious
The texture: A little dry
Other: No need to make seitan look like this. Make seitan like normal but with the intent and ingredients to make it bacony ... (e.g. smoke, maple, salt) and then keep it compressed, bake and slice.
Um: Didn't record my recipe.
Inspiration: here and here. They obviously had better results with respect to the bacon motif.
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
It swirls to the left: Cinnamon Raisin Bread
INGREDIENTS (makes 2 loaves)
- 2 1/2 tsp active dry yeast
- 3/4 cup sugar - 1 tsp salt
- 2 tsp apple cider vinegar
- 1/4 c cornstarch
- 1/3 cup vegetable oil- 1 1/3 cup warm water
- 1 cup soymilk
- 6 cup AP flour- 2/3 cup brown sugar
- 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
- 2 cups raisins
Mix together ingredients through AP flour. Add AP flour 2 cups at a time until incorporated. Knead until shiny. Add raisins. Let rise one hour or until doubled. Mix brown sugar and cinnamon together. Divide dough in two. Roll into rectangles. Spread cinnamon sugar mixture over rectangles. Roll up. Seal seam. Place in loaf pans and let rise one hour. Bake at 375 for 30 - 40 minutes. Until golden brown and hollow sounding when tapped on bottom. Cool on rack.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Pumpkin and/or Sweet Potato Pie (vegan)
I love pumpkin pie. I slightly adpated the recipe below from Bryanna Clark Grogan. I used the old timey Wesson Oil pie crust recipe. My first time making a pie crust. Everything was delicious.
1 can ~15 oz. pumpkin
1 c. milk (of your choice)
3/4 c. sugar
1/4 c. cornstarch
2 T. molasses
3/4 tsp. ground cinnamon
1 tsp. vanilla
1/2 tsp. ground ginger
1/2 tsp. nutmeg
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. clove
Throw it all in the blender. Blend well. Put it into the pie crust. Bake for 60 minutes @ 350F (watch the edges). Cool, refrigerate and eat next or subsequent day(s).
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Back to the Summer
Once upon a time in the summer I made some tomato soup. I had a lot of tomatoes. The soup is easy and delicious. Adapted from a Tyler Florence recipe.
- 3 pounds tomatoes
- 5 cloves garlic, peeled and smashed
- 2 small yellow onions, sliced
- 1/4 cup olive oil
- salt and pepper to taste
- 1 quart vegetable stock
- 4 tablespoons butter/margarine
- 1/2 cup chopped basil leaves
Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.
Bake the tomatoes, garlic and onions with olive oil, salt and pepper. Bake for 30 to 40 minutes. Put everything in a pot and cook for 30 minutes. Then add basil. Then puree the soup.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

















