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VeganEtcetera

~ Eating healthily easily

VeganEtcetera

Category Archives: Gluten Free

How’s the Ferment?

05 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by Aissa in Fermentation, Gluten Free, Natural Health, Superfoods, Traditional, Vegan

≈ 2 Comments

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Fermentation, Gluten free, Natural Health, Sauerkraut recipe, Superfoods, Traditional, Vegan, water kefir

About a month ago I posted my Sauerkraut recipe. Any one join me at the time? Here is what mine looks like now. The water is nice and clear. No floating scumminess. Nothing on the glass above the water line. This is a sign all is well. It has a good strong vinegary smell too. Fermented foods are sadly missing from many of our diets, and they are so good for us!

The backlighting is flattering!

The backlighting is flattering!

 

I also keep Water Kefir and Kombucha. The water kefir is very active in the current warm weather. I changed mine last night. I thought it would be nice to add extra flavour. The orange colour comes from the rapadura sugar I feed it, i always put in a little ginger too. After straining it I added organic parsley and mint. It is a lovely drink for these warm long evenings. Filled with billions of good live bacteria and yeasts, fantastic for keeping your gut happy and healthy. I hope the summer will continue in this form and in another month I will be sitting in the sun having my sauerkraut with a big organic salad! 🙂

Xs Aissa

Fluffy Red Velvet Aduki Truffles

02 Monday Jun 2014

Posted by Aissa in Chocolate, Gluten Free, No bake/ Raw, Superfoods, Sweets, Vegan

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Gluten free, No bake, Superfoods, Sweets, Vegan

These are fluffy with a gentle sweetness; as a result they are easy to eat. Don’t be deceived by their soft melty-ness they are super filling. The aduki beans and almonds mean one are two are more than enough at a time. I store them in the fridge or freezer to keep them firm.

You will need a cup for measuring, a plate, a bowl and some sort of blender. I use a hand held one which works fine.

Fluffly Aduki Cocoa truffles or Red velvet Aduki Truffles?

Fluffly Aduki Cocoa truffles or Red velvet Aduki Truffles?

Fluffy Red Velvet Aduki Truffles 

    • Nine unsulphered dried apricots
    • Optional: A spoon of dried mulberries

Soak these in a some water for at least an hour and then chop them.

    • A generous mug of cooked aduki beans roughly 240g. If you used canned ones make sure they are well drained.
    • Two dessertspoons of date syrup. If you are more used to normal sweets you may want to add a spoon of agave/maple syrup too!
Adukis and syrup

Adukis and syrup

Mash these together with a fork, you will be blending it so don’t worry about squashing every bean.

Dry Stuff

    • Half a cup of ground almonds
    • A quarter cup of cocoa or raw cacao
    • A dessertspoon of raw carob
    • A teaspoon of vanilla powder/ scraped insides of two vanilla pods*
    • A pinch of salt about a quarter of a teaspoon
    • Optional: Half a teaspoon of maca powder
    • Optional lovely extra: Orange zest

*If you want to use vanilla essence don’t! Vanilla bean paste in sugar would be fine but alcohol based extracts aren’t so good in raw sweets.
Mix the dry ingredients together, pressing out any lumps.

    • Two thirds of a cup of desiccated (shredded) coconut
    • Twenty four organic almonds, finely chopped

Put these on a dinner plate. You will be rolling the mixture in them.

almonds etc

Put your chopped fruit into the adukis. Give things a mix. Stir in your dry ingredients.

Grab your hand blender and start blending! Use a low setting at first, it is better for your blender. The ingredients will get quite fluffy and a pinky chocolate colour. Should have called them Red Velvet Aduki Truffles 🙂 You know I will, they were called fluffy aduki cocoa truffles.

Rinse your hands in cold water. If your hands are too warm handling the concoction you may find it all melting to goo. By the dessertspoonful gently roll the aduki truffles into the nuts and or the coconut. It was a warm day here and I found everything going a bit squashy. So work quick if you are having good weather!

Put them in the fridge or freezer to set for half an hour. I store mine in the fridge as they are lovely cold and it keeps them firm. I am a messy chef so while they are setting I try and get the mix off my hands, the cupboards and every surface. Works up the appetite anyway!

Xs Aissa

 

 

Tomato sauce again?!

02 Monday Jun 2014

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Vegan

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Gluten, Savoury, Vegan

Tomato sauces are my fall back dinner. If I can’t think what to have … it is what I have. It changes based on what organic vegetables I happen to be available (and in my kitchen). There are so many computations that work it seems like an ever versatile dish! It is simple,fast, healthy and tasty. Beans taste so much better if bought dried, soaked overnight and cooked for forty five minutes before adding them to the tomato sauce. I was not organised so went for my organic cans in the press!!From start to finish it should take under an hour.

Tomato Sauce Again! 

  • A dessertspoon of coconut oil
  • Half a teaspoon of nigella seeds
  • Half a teaspoon of chilli flakes
  • Black pepper to taste
  • A pinch of sea salt
  • Five cloves of finally (ha! meant finely) chopped garlic
  • One carrot finely sliced
  • One 400g (240g drained) can of organic chopped tomatoes
  • A teaspoon of paprika
  • A dessertspoon of dried oregano
  • One 400g (240g drained) can of organic pinto beans
  • Third of a cup of organic frozen peas
  • !00g of organic baby spinach leaves
  • A third of a cup of ground almonds
  • Ten fresh basil leaves- torn

Get your saucepan and put it on a medium heat. Add your coconut oil and let it melt. Add your nigella seeds, chilli flakes and black pepper. Let them sizzle for a half a minute.  Add your garlic and after another minute add your carrot. Give things a stir. Add your tomatoes and paprika. Let this cook for a five minutes. Add your pinto beans and peas. Let these cook through so the peas are warmed through. Add the spinach, stir it into the tomatoes. Let it all cook for ten/ fifteen minutes at a simmer. The spinach releases a lot of water so it needs to reduce. Add the ground almonds, this thickens the sauce and adds a richness to it. Throw in the basil leaves. It will prob need to cook for another few minutes.

Colourful food

Colourful food

I had mine with kelp noodles but clearly it would go with any kind of pasta you like!

Xs Aissa

Gluten Free Lemon Cake

20 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by Aissa in Cake, Cupcakes, Gluten Free, Uncategorized, Vegan

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Cake, Cupcakes, Gluten free, Vegan

So my lovely” detox healthier me” plan went a little astray over the weekend. I was away with my sister and much fun was had, but a few alcoholic beverages were also had. 🙂 I had some superfood powders with me and took lots of spirulina so I was quite good really. In my holistic approach it is not healthy to be too strict either and it is rare I get too spend time with my big sis! So I am back on track again I will preparing myself a wheatgrass shot shortly.

For all you guys not detoxing here is a Lemon Cake! It is vegan (obviously), gluten free and sweetened with agave. The icing/frosting is made with icing/ confectioner’s sugar. But there are some alternative options as the bottom of the post in regards to sugariness.

Gluten free Lemon Cake 

  • Two thirds of a cup of soya/ coconut yogurt. Some coconut yogurts are very set so feel free so add a little coconut milk if nessacary.
  • One teaspoon of apple cyder vinegar
  • Juice and zest of one and a half organic unwaxed lemons

Mix these ingredients together and leave to sit and curdle while you prepare the other bits.

  • A generous half a cup of dark agave
  • A third of a cup of a light sunflower oil. I found I had run out of sunflower when I went to make this. I melted four scant dessertspoons of organic cold pressed coconut oil instead. The coconut oil changed the texture, it was more set than crumbly but tasted just as good.
  • A quarter cup of apple and strawberry puree. You could just use apple if you like.
  • One teaspoon of sieved cornstarch.

Mix these together in order, sieving in the cornstarch and then giving everything a quick whisk.

  • One and a half cups of fine maize meal
  • Half a cup of ground almonds- almond flour.
  • One teaspoon of vanilla powder. If you are using vanilla extract add it to the agave.
  • A pinch of sea salt
  • One teaspoon of baking powder
  • Half a teaspoon of bread soda/bicarbonate of soda/ baking soda. So many names for it!!

Preheat your oven to 170C / 340F if a fan oven, prob 180C/350F if not fan.

Prepare a 7.5 inch / 20cm cake tin. Put a square of baking paper in the centre and lightly grease.

Mix your soya yogurt, apple cyder vinegar and lemon juice. Leave to one side

Get a bowl and mix your agave, oil and fruit puree. Sieve in your cornstarch and give it a whisk for a minute.

In another bowl put in your maize meal, add your ground almonds and press out any big lumps. Add your vanilla powder and salt and give the ingredients a mix. Sieve in the baking powder and baking soda- I always sieve these as it is pretty horrid to come across a lump of them in your lovely cake. Now mix everything again!

Add your yogurt mix to your agave mix and give it a quick whisk. Quickly yet gently add your dry ingredients to the wet. Lightly fold the dry in, just until they are combined. NO OVER MIXING and leave your worries and tension to one side so you do not beat the cake batter up! Pour the batter into your cake tin and put it straight into your oven. Heed the advise, if you over mix the cake will be dense and will not rise.

It takes 30 minutes in my fan oven but it could take 35 in a normal one. It is done when it starts to come away from the sides, there are little cracks on the top and it is going a light golden colour. If it looks good take it out and stick a skewer in it, if it comes out dry then your cake is done. Leave it in the tin for 10 minutes to cool. Gluten free goodies can be a bit delicate and crumbly while warm. Treat it kindly when you turn it out to cool on wire rack.

delicately balanced on my windowsill!

delicately balanced on my windowsill!

If you were to serve it as little lemon fingers I think you could get away with just squeezing a little lemon juice on top. This was a birthday cake for one of the guys I work with. He doesn’t mind a bit of sugar so I made a Lemony icing!

  • Two and a half dessertspoons of coconut oil- mashed
  • Half a cup of icing / confectioner’s sugar – seived
  • Half a teaspoon of vanilla powder or the scraped insides of a vanilla pod
  • Juice and zest of half an organic unwaxed lemon
  • One dessertspoon of warm water – cold water would make the coconut oil re-solidify.

Mash the coconut oil, sieve in the icing sugar and vanilla, mush mash and press so the fat is taken up by the sugar. Add your lemon juice and zest and give it another good mix. If it is still not forming a smooth spreadable mix you can add a dessertspoon of warm water. Make sure your cake is completely cooled before putting your icing on. I put a few little bits of lemon skin on a decoration.

Iced- in a slightly untidy manner and sitting in the morning sunshine. :-)

Iced- in a slightly untidy manner and sitting in the morning sunshine. 🙂

If you prefer your sugar in the agave fructose form I have made an icing with agave and coconut oil and arrowroot in the past. Elena’s pantry has one almost exactly like mine. The only adjustment I would make for this cake is reduce the coconut milk by a few dessertspoons and add the juice of half a lemon instead. http://www.elanaspantry.com/coconut-cream-frosting/

Hope you try it out. Xs Aissa

Glowing Orange Evening juice

11 Sunday May 2014

Posted by Aissa in Fermentation, Gluten Free, juice, Natural Health, Vegan

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Fermentation, Gluten free, Juice, Natural Health, Vegan

To follow up on my juicetastic day yesterday I decided to share my evening juice. It is simple, tasty and a lovely to finish off the day with such a brightly coloured concoction.

glowing Orange Evening Juice!

glowing Orange Evening Juice!

Glowing Orange Evening

  • Half a large blood orange- mine was almost the size of a grapefruit
  • Half a green apple
  • One stick of celery
  • A piece of turmeric the size of the top of your thumb.
  • Optional: A shot measure of water kefir

C’est ça!( That is it! ). It’s a small juice so you could always double the orange, apple and celery for a longer drink. I woke up this morning feeling really refreshed. I really enjoyed my “Not so smooth energy smoothie” for breakfast! I added some organic almonds that I had soaked over night for extra crunch. Planning a gigantic salad with sprouted buckwheat and avocado for lunch.

Writing this made me want the juice again! This time I added some wheatgrass.

Morning sunshine- good name for the variation?

Morning sunshine- good name for the variation?

xs Aissa

Sauerkraut – the new old superfood.

10 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Aissa in Fermentation, Gluten Free, Natural Health, Savoury, Superfoods, Traditional

≈ 3 Comments

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Fermentation, Gluten free, Natural Health, Sauerkraut recipe, Savoury, Superfoods, Traditional

Fermented foods, how do I begin to sing their praises? I suppose I did already with my brief posts declaring the life force of my water kefir. I also have a wonderful kilner jar inhabiting kombucha scoby. These two and my sauerkraut all live and grow together in the corner of my kitchen named “ferment-ville”. I will rave a bit more about them after my “How to make sauerkraut”. There are many variations, lots of traditions but this is the one I made Thursday night!

How to make sauerkraut! I may be bordering on a Kimchi, because of the ginger.

First the Organic cabbage- organic because who wants to ferment chemical sprays!

Beautiful Organic white cabbage!

Beautiful Organic white cabbage!

Second get a kilner jar, I used a 1 litre( 1+3/4 pints) jar, as I intended to do two cabbages. It is important to have sterilised the kilner with almost boiling water (that’s what I do) or steam sterilise. This is what your sauerkraut will be living in, it is better that it be really clean than risk bad bacteria getting a foothold.

  • Two white cabbage- remove the outer leaves and discard. The leaves not the cabbage!
  • Two inches of organic ginger
  • Optional: some organic cucumber, three inch piece (approx. 7.5cms)
  • Generous teaspoon of organic cumin seeds
  • Six cloves of organic garlic
  • Three dessertspoons of fine sea salt
  • Roughly 400ml of still mineral water
  • Extra optional: A dessertspoon of sauerkraut you have made before or a good quality raw one from your health store.

Rinse your hands, make extra sure there is no soap residue on them. Soap will kill the bacteria and inhibit the fermentation.

Cut the base off each of your cabbages, hold onto the hard stem as you can use this later. It can be a useful “cap” to hold your sauerkraut down with.

I was given a spiralizer for my birthday by my lovely work mates. I am attempting to spiralizes everything at the moment. Including the cabbage for this! It spiralized for a bit. It then became stubborn and I stubbornly persisted for another bit. The wonderful contraption certainly sped things up.You can of course put it in a food processor or just chop it finely, think of the thickness you would expect in a slaw.

Measure half the water, add two and a half dessertspoons of the salt and give it a stir.

Pour the salt water (brine) over the cabbage. Mix things up and knead the cabbage for a couple of minutes. The salt and kneading helps draw water from the cabbage.

Prepare your ginger. I rinse it and peel off bits that still seem dirty. Chop it finely and throw it in with the cabbage.

Add your cumin seeds.

Chop your cucumber. Add this to the rest. Toss the mixture and give it another knead.

It will look like this picture, if you look at it before you add your cucumber! 🙂

Spiralized and chopped!

Spiralized and chopped!

Next put a plate on top of it and weigh it down with something, I use a 1kg/ 2.2lb bag of flour. Leaving it sit gives the salt a chance to draw more water from the veg. During this time I usually clean up the bits of cabbage I have scattered to the four winds about the kitchen! Give it twenty minutes if you can.

Cut your cloves of garlic in half.

Grab your sterilised kilner jar. Uncover the almost sauerkraut. Grab handfuls of the mixture and press it down into the jar. if you find that there is not enough water to cover the cabbage add half a dessertspoon of salt to the left over water and add this to the kilner jar. Really get in there and try and compress the mixture as much as possible. Ideally it will nearly be to the top of your jar, maybe an inch/ couple of centimetres gap. Now arrange your garlic over the top, garlic is a powerful anti-bacterial and anti fungal, but won’t kill the friendly bacteria we want inhabiting the cabbage! Now grab your cabbage base, slice off any dirty bits, place in the jar and press every thing again. Everything should be covered in salty water. Make sure there are no bits of food sticking up out of the water or left on the dry sides of the jar and lid. These bits that are exposed the air will go mouldy and ruin your sauerkraut.

Keep your sauerkraut out of direct light and away from extremes in temperature. Every day open your jar once. This will leave out gases and leaves in air so it ferments to grow good bacteria as opposed to alcohol. Prevents the jar exploding too. After maybe a week you should start to notice the smell changing. It will take on more vinegary notes, a sign all is going well. You could could eat it at this point, it would be like fermented slaw. If you would like a softer texture and more sour flavour I’d say a minimum of two months. The white cabbage takes longer to soften, if you shred so it is EXTREMELY fine it will soften faster. Once opened I keep mine in the fridge.

It will be sauerkraut!

It will be sauerkraut!

Troubleshooting

If you have lots of space in the jar and everything is not covered in water you can grab a whole bulb of garlic and sit this onto. When you close the jar everything should be compressed. If a bit of the garlic is sticking out the top that is okay. Second option: if like me you decided one and a half cabbages would probably fill the jar and gave the rest to your partner so he could make amazingly yummy vegan coleslaw. You may have even more of a gap. So what I did was sterilise a really small jar,  roughly 7cms / 3 inc. high. After I put my garlic and cabbage on top of the mixture, I put in the jar and pressed everything again. I then closed the jar. I have done this before and it worked out fine.

Things to never do. Never use a plastic container A:It can not be sterilised and B: the sauerkraut produces lactic and acetic acids (hence lacti- bacteria being in it). Acids will eat into plastic so not a good combination. Never change jars after you have made it. It upsets the sauerkraut, it does not like change. I speak from experience. I had not left enough of a gap in my jar the first time I made sauerkraut and it all started to try and escape. I transferred it and it started to grow a white mouldy bloom within two days.

What makes Sauerkraut Super. A bit about fermented foods.

Most people in the western world do not regularly consume fermented foods, if at all. Western diets are also high in processed foods and people do not eat enough fresh foods. Vegans and vegetarians generally do better but most people think store bought yogurt is the only fermented food about. Store bought yogurt is nothing in comparison with traditional yogurts or milk kefir (my Nana called it her yogurt plant). Being vegan clearly I am going be staying clear of the poor cow’s milk. But there are plenty other healthy fermented food that one can make or buy in good health stores.

Pre canning and fake pickling (bought jars of cooked things in vinegars) foods were preserved by real pickling and fermenting. They were made from scratch or with live starters, such as sourdough for bread making. The benefits of consuming these fermented foods are many. One benefit is that the food’s nutrients are broken down and delivered to your body in an easily absorbable form. There is of course the delivery of millions if not billions of living good bacteria and good yeasts to your system. These live and active cultures have grown out in the world (not labs) and there is an arguement that therefor they are stronger, more adaptable and therefor better at surviving and setting up home in your digestive system! What I like about sauerkraut is cabbage is a good source of glutamine an amino acid that has been shown to help the gut to repair itself. It also tastes good, which is important! 🙂

If you would like to know more Sandor Katz has a great book called “The Art of Fermantation”

Xs Aissa

Mostly Green Dinner!

03 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Vegan

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Gluten free, Savoury, Vegan

This was a case of I have these things so I will eat them for dinner! It turned out lovely so I thought I would share.

This will make more than enough to serve two people.

  • Three cloves of garlic chopped
  • One white onion spiralized or chopped roughly
  • One carrot spiralized or thinly sliced
  • A bunch of purple sprouting broccoli- thick part of stalks removed. A “bunch” being what you can easily hold in one hand!
  • Mug of chopped curly kale – thick stalks removed
  • A mug or 240g of cooked puy, green or brown lentils. If preparing whole lentils from dry rem. they can take 45 mins to cook.
  • One avocado roughly chopped, half is for each person.
  • Black pepper – to taste
  • Small pinch of sea salt
  • Dash of coconut aminos
  • Dash of rice mirin
  • One teaspoon of dried oregano
  • Five or six leaves of fresh basil torn into strips. I tear because cutting with a knife bruises the leaves.
  • A dessertspoon of coconut oil
  • Optional: When serving sprinkle with a teaspoon of thinly cut roasted nori seaweed (one with no added nasty things e.g. sugar or msg )

So prepare your ingredients- washing, spirallizing and chopping.

Beautiful and seasonal- get it while you can

Beautiful and seasonal- get it while you can

Start by melting some coconut oil on a medium high heat in a wok, and put your onions on to soften.

Add salt and black pepper and then the garlic.

Now start steaming your purple sprouting broccoli and kale together.

Add your oregano to your onions and after a minute add your lentils.

The puy lentils!

The puy lentils!

Leave it heat through and add your coconut aminos and mirin.

Add your spiralized or thinly sliced carrot.

The purple sprouting broccoli and kale should be ready to be added to the other ingredients. Add the basil and toss everything together.

If you have not already done so, cut your avocado in half and roughly chop it. Do NOT add this.

Portion out the servings and NOW mix in the avocado. If having the nori sprinkle a little on top of each one.

TaDa! Dinner.

kale- carrot- onions. Eating my colours :-)

kale- carrot- onions. Eating my colours 🙂

 

Buckwheat Granola Superfied!

09 Wednesday Apr 2014

Posted by Aissa in Cookies, Gluten Free, Natural Health, Superfoods, Vegan

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Buckwheat Granola, Natural Health, Vegan

Buckwheat Granola – I almost feel it has to be done. There are a lot of lovely recipes out there- the one over on Ohsheglows.com, some lovely raw ones like the one on choosingraw.com. But I thought I would share my version of this yummy classic. It is fab as a granola, I have it in my “Not so smooth Energy Smoothie” sometimes also just eat it like a biscuit/cookie.

I have super boosted by granola, but if you don’t have a stock of protein and superfood powders in your press you can just increase the ground almonds by three dessertspoons.

Preheat your oven to 150C / 300F. Line a baking tray.

Dry ingredients

  • One and a half cups of raw buckwheat
  • A third of a cup of ground almonds
  • A third of a cup of red quinoa grain- more nutty flavour than normal quinoa and a good source of zeathanthin.
  • A scant half cup of whole linseed i.e. flaxseed
  • One dessertspoonful of poppy seeds
  • A good pinch of sea salt
  • A quarter cup of coconut sugar
  • A teaspoon of vanilla powder (or put extract in with the liquid stuff )

Optional Uber Superfing bits

As I said just use a little more ground almonds if you don’t have all theses things.

  • One teaspoon of maca powder
  • One teaspoon of lucuma powder
  • One dessertspoonful of hemp protein powder
  • One dessertspoonful of rice protein, I used Sunwarrior Vanilla warrior blend

Wet ingredients

  • Four dessertspoons of apple strawberry puree – I use an organic brand called Clearspring. Just apple puree would be fine.
  • An eighth of a cup of dark agave
  • An eighth of a cup of pure maple syrup
  • One dessertspoonful blanched almond butter
  • One dessertspoonful cashew nut butter
  • One dessertspoonful of natural crunchy peanut butter.
  • One teaspoon vanilla extract if you have not used powder

On the nut butter front I change these about a bit, a regular almond butter is lovely, but experiment we all have our favourite nut butters!

Get a big bowl and throw all the dry stuff into it. Give them a stir and a toss so they are evenly mixed.

Get another bowl and put all the wet things in. Mix them very well – no streaks of different ingredients!

Add the wet to the dry and spread evenly on your lined baking tray. About half a centimeter thick. That’s .20 of an inch.

Pop in the middle of the oven and bake for about 22mins before pulling out and flipping it over. I use a spatula and work from one side to the other so I don’t miss bits- cos I’m oddly methodical in all cases where flipping is required… 🙂 Put back in the oven, turn your oven down to 120C/ 250F. Let it bake for another 5/6 mins if you have a fan oven maybe another 10mins if you don’t.

Take it out, set it on a flat surface and kinda poke at it a bit so that it is broken up into rough shapes. It will still be a little soft out of the oven but will firm up as it cools. Happy crunching!

Buckwheat Granola in my Not so smooth Energy Smoothie!. On my windowsil!

Buckwheat Granola in my Not so smooth Energy Smoothie!. On my windowsil!

 

 

 

 

Cauliflower Miso Hummus

04 Friday Apr 2014

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Vegan

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Gluten free, Vegan

How many moves away from original hummus do you have to be before something stops being hummus and becomes something else? I think because this retains tahini and chickpeas I can still safely call this hummus without controversy. So I made this last night, I had some of cauliflower in my dinner because you don’t need a lot for this recipe only six or seven small florets.
Equipment wise you will need a blender of sorts- a hand-held one will be fine.

  • Six or seven steamed florets of cauliflower
  • A cup of cooked chickpeas
  • Three cloves of garlic very finely chopped
  • A dessertspoonful of a light miso- I used a rice soya one which is on the sweet side
  • Two dessert spoons of a runny light tahini
  • Two dessert spoons of extra virgin olive oil – and a little more for drizzling on top
  • A quarter teaspoon of ground paprika
  • Black pepper to taste.
  • A lime or if you prefer a lemon
  • You do not need salt as your miso is salty

First steam your cauliflower, should be done in under ten minutes. Run it under cold water to cool and leave to the side.

Get a large bowl if you are going to be using a hand-held blender or just plonk stuff into your blending jug as you go!

Chop your garlic and put in your bowl, if you find garlic hard to digest you could cook it first. Add you olive oil, tahini, miso, paprika and black pepper. Give it a stir and mash, mixing things well together, or give it a quick blitz in your blender.

Now add your cauliflower and chickpeas and stir again. Chop a third off your lime and squeeze the juice in, mix once more ( if you think you would prefer the traditional lemon then use that instead). Now blend! Have a taste, see  if you need more black pepper, lime/lemon or even paprika!! I like it at the level I have suggested.

Transfer the hummus to a bowl and drizzle a little olive oil on top to stop it going dry. I like to cover it and keep it OUT of the fridge over night, reason being the miso will be alive and fermenty if kept at room temperature. It also tastes better the next day!

Hummus the thing that photographs like weird paste!

Hummus the thing that photographs like weird paste!

 

Not so smooth Energy Smoothie

29 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Natural Health, No bake/ Raw, Superfoods, Vegan

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Gluten free, Natural Health, Superfoods, Vegan

It’s the weekend I thought I would break out and have a banana in my breakfast smoothie- I know I know wild behaviour!! I normally have a dessertspoon or two of berries in this which I soak overnight in Kombucha- but is good to vary one’s diet and though I feel bananas are a it too sweet to be having all the time, it really rocks in this! Peanut butter and banana the perfect combination!

  • 1 banana thinly sliced (or some berries)
  • A dash of real Kombucha (i have my own, but you just want a live one with no added ingredients)
  • Half a cup of non-diary milk- I use coconut
  • 1 teaspoon of Barleygrass powder/ juice powder
  • Half a teaspoon of Maca powder
  • 1 teaspoon of Hemp protein powder
  • 1 teaspoon of Rice protein- or just have a little more Hemp protein ( I am the lucky recipient of a pack of Sunwarrior Warrior Blend so I am trying it in everything at the moment)
  • A third of a teaspoon of Ashwagandha powder ( it tastes very strong )
  • A teaspoon of Chia seeds
  • A teaspoon of ground Linseed i.e. Flaxseeds
  • A scattering of Goji berries approx. a teaspoon
  • A teaspoon of Cacao nibs
  • A teaspoon of Lecithin granules
  • A HUGE teaspoon of Peanut Butter (one only made from peanuts!)

I put everything in- in the order of the recipe. They all live in the same cupboard so I just get one down at a time rather than covering my tiny kitchen in superfoods. When I have got as far as the Ashwagandha I give it a good stir and then add as far as your Lecithin and stir again! Then add your peanut butter- tasting some first – just to make sure it is good of course!!

This is packed full of antioxidants, vitamins, minerals, protein, healthy carbs, healthy fats and a good dash of chlorophyll ( i.e. the green stuff!) for energy. It really sustains me due to the slow release of energy. And it is a yummy start to the day.

Tasty goodness

Tasty goodness

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