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Tag Archives: Savoury

Beetroot Blush Hummus- Vegan Gluten free friendly!

27 Friday Feb 2015

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

≈ 4 Comments

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Gluten free, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

Whay can’t more food be bright pink? Well it can just add beetroot! Brighten up your crackers with antioxidant rich colourful food.

Beetroot Blush Hummus

  • 240g/ one cup (and a bit) of cooked chickpeas or sprouted ones!
  • If you want it even pinker you could use aduki beans instead of chickpeas!
  • Two dessertspoons of a natural dark tahini
  • One small bright beetroot
  • Two cloves of garlic
  • A teaspoon of whole cumin or half a teaspoon of ground
  • Two dessertspoons of fresh lemon juice
  • Two dessertspoons of organic cold pressed extra virgin olive oil
  • Three dessertspoons of water
  • A lovely optional: A quarter teaspoon of umi plum puree
  • An eighth of a teaspoon of sea salt or pink himalayan salt
  • About six twist of black pepper
  • A spinach leaf for decoration!!

If you have a jug blender you can just pop the lot in and pulse it a bit and then blend. If you are using an immersion hand blender you may need an extra spoon of water, also I would mash the chickpeas with a fork and stir the ingredients first.

Fast and easy tasty pink beetroot hummus!

PINK!!

PINK!!

Xs Aissa

Lettuce Pea & Avocado Soup Vegan Gluten Free

26 Thursday Feb 2015

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

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Gluten free, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

This is a bright green light super yummy soup. Simple and fast to make. Just a matter of cooking off your onion, garlic and spices and then blending the lot! You can use homemade stock*, or get cubes- just watch out there is no hydrolysed vegetable protein in them (acts like MSG).

Lettuce Pea & Avocado Soup

  • Almost a whole head of a large organic oakleaf or batavia lettuce
  • Two cups of organic peas fresh or frozen peas
  • One red onion
  • Three cloves of garlic
  • Half a ripe avocado
  • One teaspoon of yellow mustard
  • Half a teaspoon of nigella seeds
  • A teaspoon of english style mustard
  • Two and a half cups of home made stock* or water plus a good quality stock cube
  • Twenty fresh mint leaves
  • Lots of black pepper ( to your personal taste )
  • An eight of a teaspoon of sea salt (less if using salty stock cubes!)
  • A scant dessertspoon of organic coconut oil

Sooo put your saucepan on a medium high heat and melt the coconut oil. Add in your mustard seeds and nigella seeds- once the oil has heated a little. Finely chop your red onion and add it too. Cook until it is getting transparent and add in your garlic. Add your salt and a little of the pepper. Add your stock. Add your peas and the mustard, give it a stir. Reduce the heat to medium.

Like a sesame street lettuce- looks like it might sing! "let-tuce be!" :-)

Like a sesame street lettuce- looks like it might sing! “let-tuce be!” 🙂

Now… wash your lettuce and chop it. If you have an immersion hand blender you will need to chop it quite finely. If using a jug blender it can be roughly chopped. Wash your mint and get your avocado ready. If using a jug blender you pour in the stock and peas- add more pepper and pop in the mint avocado and lettuce and blend. Immersion blender add everything to the pot and blend it in there- off the heat of course!!!

Ta-da! cCreamy satisfying bright green soup!!!

Green! Creamy! Pea-y minty!!

Green! Creamy! Pea-y minty!!

Serve with your favourite vegan bread… I actually just ate it on its own ‘cos it was scrummy, if I don’t say so myself!! Xs Aissa

Footnotes:

*see my French Onion Stew-oup footnotes for a home made stock recipe!

 

Easy peasy lemon squeezy- Buckwheat Pancakes- Vegan & Gluten Free

17 Tuesday Feb 2015

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Sweets, Traditional, Vegan

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Gluten free, Savoury, Sweets, Traditional, Vegan

It is Pancake Tuesday- let the crepe craziness commence! Oddly in my family we actually only ended up eating pancakes once a year! As a grown up I may even partake bi-annually! OooOOo. Having concocted this simple recipe I may do so more often. I made these a couple of weeks ago with the idea of keeping them as wraps- but I just ate them all with tons of maple syrup and lemon instead!!!

Easy Peasy Buckwheat Pancakes!

  • One tablespoon of ground flaxseed
  • Three tablespoons of water
  • One cup of buckwheat flour
  • A eighth teaspoon of sea salt or pink Himalayan salt
  • Two teaspoons of sieved arrowroot powder
  • Half a teaspoon of baking powder-sieved
  • A cup and a quarter of unsweetened almond milk- have some spare incase the batter thickens too much
  • Organic coconut oil for frying

Topping Suggestions

  • Organic banana with peanut butter
  • Maple syrup
  • Vanilla powder
  • Cinnamon
  • Tahini
  • Freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • Vegan ice-cream…yum!
  • Fresh berries and coconut yogurt
  • Melted vegan chocolate on that vegan ice-cream!!!
  • Go crazy with savoury have hummus and salad-y bits!
  • Treat it like a tortilla and fill with a bean chilli sauce!

Method!

Mix your tablespoon of ground flax/ linseed with the three spoons of water. Leave to one side to thicken. This is called a flax egg- as it replaces an egg gelling capacity in a recipe.

Mix your dry stuff- I always sieve my arrowroot and baking powder incase of lumps.

Add your “flax egg” to your almond milk and give a stir.

Make a well in the centre of your dry ingredients, pour in the almond milk flax mix and gently whisk it all together.

Put some coconut oil in your pan, set to a medium high heat. I actually did mine in a wok. Let it melt so it coats the pan. Pour in a ladle full of your pancake batter, swirl the pan a little so it is evenly spread. Leave it alone for a minute or two so it cooks. Peep under a corner to see if it browning, only then attempt The Flipping!!

Buckwheat pancake - the first flip!

Buckwheat pancake – the first flip!

They cook quite fast as they are not thick- like a pancake crepe hybrid!

Tasty enough to have with just maple syrup!! Num num num

Tasty enough to have with just maple syrup!! Num num num

Hope you have a happy crepe day! Xs Aissa

Vegan French Onion Stew-oup Quick!

24 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Dinner, Gluten free, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

This was going to be a light broth-y soup with veggies, but I wanted to make it a bit more hearty and filling with puy lentils and it kinda ended up stew like. Hence “Stew-oup!” It turned out super tasty, if I do say so myself. It is fast to make ,including prep and leaving it cook it took only 45mins.

That said I did cheat. I came in from work, and for various reasons it has been an exhausting week. I had not soaked puy lentils, I did not want to wait forty minutes for them to cook (Here end-th the excuses). O but the joy of organic canned puy lentils! The ones I get are an English brand, they are only in water- no salt, no sugar no preservatives…no waiting!

Vegan French Onion Stew-oup Quick!

  • A dessertspoon of organic coconut oil or peanut oil
  • A teaspoon of nigella seeds
  • A teaspoon of yellow mustard seeds
  • A slice of organic ginger very finely chopped
  • A couple of twists of black pepper
  • One large yellow onion not too finely diced
  • Two small red onions quite finely diced
  • An eighth of a teaspoon of pink himalayan salt or sea salt
  • Half a teaspoon of organic turmeric powder
  • One teaspoon of english style mustard
  • One and a half organic onion stock cubes or Homemade stock*
  • Minimum three to four cups of boiling water (more if needed)
  • Half a medium head of broccoli approx cup and two thirds
  • Four cloves of garlic finely chopped
  • Two medium carrots- I spiralized mine**
  • Two large portabello mushrooms one very finely chopped one thinly sliced
  • A bit more than a cup of cooked puy lentils or a 240g (dry weight) tin of them.
  • Two dessertspoons of cold pressed extra virgin olive oil
  • An eighth of a teaspoon of pink himalayan salt or sea salt
  • About eight twists of black pepper or to taste
  • Optional: a little fresh parsley chopped

See the bottom of the post for footnotes!

Easy Garlic Toast

  • A few slices of toasted brown spelt bread or rye or your gluten free preference
  • A little organic coconut oil or cold pressed extra virgin olive oil
  • A clove of garlic
  • More black pepper

The quick way is simple. Toast your bread. Cut a clove of garlic in two. Rub the garlic on the toast- it should actual wear down a bit. Scrape on your coconut oil or drizzle your olive oil. Season with black pepper. Ta-Da! Garlic Toast! If you have time you could of course make proper garlic bread in the oven, but this is a quick work night dinner!

Vegan French Onion Stew-oup Method

I have listed the ingredients in the order you put them in. Put your pot on a medium to high heat. Melt your organic coconut oil or let your peanut oil warm up. Coconut oil can be safely heated to 225C and peanut oil can go up to 215C. Add your nigella seeds and yellow mustard seeds ( they should sizzle when added). Add your black pepper and ginger next. Now add your chopped yellow onion. Chop your red onions and add these. Add your salt. After a couple of minutes add the turmeric. At this stage put the lid on to allow the onions to sweat and cook. You need to keep an eye on them and give them the odd stir, they can easily burn. Once they have shrunk down and are lovely and transparent add the mustard. Give it a stir.

The start!

The start!

the onions cooked!

the onions cooked!

Add your homemade stock or stock cubes and water, bring it all to a simmer. Pop in the broccoli. I chopped each of the florets of broccoli in three so that they were nice and thin. This means they cook quickly and are easier to eat if you are just using a spoon to have your “stew-oup”.

Et la broccoli!

Et la broccoli!

plus carrots

 

After a five minutes add spiralized or shaved carrots. Chop your Portabello mushrooms and add these. Add in your cooked puy lentils. Let it all to come back up to a light simmer. Now put in your cold pressed extra virgin olive oil. Extra virgin olive oil has a burning point of 100C. I do not use it on a direct heat, aside from the trans fatty acids the flavour would also burn off! Add the rest of the salt and pepper. Taste your concoction to check the vegetables are cooked and if it needs more seasoning.

Almost ready to serve!

Almost ready to serve!

And almost time to eat! Prepare your Easy Garlic toast and grab a blow. If you have fresh parsley chop a teaspoon and sprinkle on your soup when serving. You should have enough for two or three people.

Stew-oup!

Stew-oup and Garlic Toast!

Hope you try out the “Stew-oup!’ Let me know. O and I am posting on Peanut butter day so in it’s honour here is a link to my Nut Butter Chocolate Pie ! Hope you are having a good one. Xs Aissa

Footnotes!

*the stock cubes I use have no hydrolysed vegetable protein or hydrogenated oil. Homemade stock can be made easily and in advance. Keep some your veg peelings or veg juice pulp for a couple of days in the fridge. You boil these for approx an hour with salt, pepper, an onion, a stalk of finely chopped celery,some herbs of your choice e.g.parsley, thyme, rosemary. A large teaspoon of miso paste is a lovely addition. Taste the broth to see if it is nice. Leave to cool a little and pass it through a sieve. You can use a sterilised kilner jar or passata jar to store it. Pour it in while still reasonably hot and fill to the tip top tip. The passata’s metal top should actually be sucked in a little by the heat and be sealed. When you open it it should make a popping noise like a jar does when you buy it new! This will keep for a good few days in the fridge.

**If you do not have a spiralizer you can use a veg peeler to get long strips of carrot.

Breaking a food blog rule for Christmas & Vegan Lentil Nut Loaf

24 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

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Christmas dinner, Gluten free, Lentil Nut loaf, recipe, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

I am visiting family for the Christmas break. So I am laptop-less and without my large collection of baking supplies. This means I may not post many recipes. I brought a Stollen with me, which turns out I put too much rose oil in, I think I lost count when adding the drops. My terrible attention span strikes again! Turns out the stollen is especially lovely toasted this time though.

Most years I make the very traditional Lentil Nut Loaf for Christmas dinner. It is handy as it can be pre-made, sliced and popped under the grill or in the oven to heat up. Here is the blog rule breaking part….I feel awful doing this but I am going to share the recipe without a picture of it! 😦 Don’t hate me!!!!

It is just that this Christmas I am going to have a festively seasoned soup like thing instead. Therefor I am not making said Lentil Nut loaf and have no pictures. Previous to blogging I did not photograph my food, surprisingly enough. 😉

Here is a link for this year’s dinner over on the PPK.com, Mushroom Hot Pot. I have adapted the recipe a little; I use fresh shiitake in it and leave out the red peppers and lemongrass. I think lemongrass tastes slivery coloured, metallic and a little medicinal. I am not a fan in other words. I have the Hot Pot with veggies on the side and maybe lentils or beans thrown in to it.

Here is my imageless….

Very Traditional Vegan Lentil Nut Loaf

This recipe is a mix of many, from cookbooks and various websites. It also changes slightly every time I make it. I seem to have never written down the many versions!!! Only for my friend Fiona asking for the recipe recently it may never have appeared in text form. 🙂 I think the most influential recipe for my Lentil Nut Loaf is from My Vegan Cookbook, Lentil Loaf, it is only fair to give him credit. Also he has pictures !! (Hides face behind hands and blushes)

I do a Basic tomato sauce to spread on top of it before it goes in the oven.

  • A tin of tomatoes or passata
  • A scant dessertspoonful of coconut oil
  • One finely chopped onion
  • Three finely chopped cloves of garlic
  • A round teaspoon of dried oregano
  • Black pepper to taste
  • A pinch of sea salt or pink Himalayan salt
  • A quarter teaspoon of rapadura/sucucant sugar alternatively you can use date syrup. It helps reduce the tartness but you can leave it out.

Cook off your onion and garlic in the oil until the onions are soft and clear. Add everything else and heat through. The loaf will be in the oven for forty minutes so the sauce will definitely be cooked by then! O and do the sauce first as you will be adding a bit to the loaf.

Next the Loaf-y Bit!

Pre-heat your oven to 190C/370F. You will also need a lightly greased loaf tin, tin foil and a bowl!

  • Two cups of cooked lentils, I suggest brown or puy lentils
  • A cup of ground almonds
  • A cup of some sort of breadcrumbs that suit you wheat free, gluten free etc.
  • A tablespoon of cornstarch / fine maize meal
  • Two tablespoons of natural no salt peanut butter
  • A tablespoon of your premade tomato sauce
  • Nearly all recipes call for two sticks of grated celery-I do two carrots instead
  • Garlic to taste but no less than three cloves
  • One large or two small chopped onions
  • A dessertspoon of coconut oil
  • A half of a teaspoon of mustard
  • Half a cup of chopped fresh parsley
  • A teaspoon of dried thyme
  • A quarter teaspoon of cumin
  • A tiny pinch of sea salt
  • A dash of tamari
  • A little black pepper to taste
  • A small dash of apple cyder vinegar

Sooo cook your onions and garlic with the dessertspoonful of the coconut oil until the onions are transparent. Leave to cool down for a five minutes.

The puy lentils!

I had a picture of puy lentils!

In your bowl combine all the other ingredients and then add in your onions and garlic to them. Press it all together. If not sticking together you can add another spoon of tomato sauce.

Grab your loaf tin, put some of your tomato sauce on the base and side. Add in your lentil loaf mix and put the rest of the tomato sauce on top. Cook for twenty minutes and then cover with tinfoil ( to stop the top burning). Cook for another twenty-five minutes. Let it cool for a minimum of ten minutes before turning out and another ten before slicing.

Serve with your favourite veggies, salad and maybe some vegan gravy! It is very filling and is just as lovely the day after.

Organic salad

Also found a picture of salad

Once again if you celebrate the Yule, enjoy it! Hope you had a good Solstice, a good almost finished Hanukkah! Or maybe just some time with friends and or family with a few days off work! Xs Aissa

Quinoa Sushi- vegan style! Gluten free taboot!

11 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Natural Health, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

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Gluten free, Natural Health, Quinoa, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

I love my sushi- especially avocado. At heart I am an impatient soul. I want healthy sushi fast, so fast I don’t want to wait forty five minutes for my brown rice to cook. I like to eat nutritious food so I am not a big fan of “white” starches so white rice is right out. Quinoa – “the queen of grains” still has your B vitamins also magnesium and all nine essential amino acids in the right porportions.  The red quinoa contains zeaxanthin a wonderful antioxidant. The important thing for fast sushi is it takes 20- 25 minutes to cook! (Usually only 15mins but you want it squishy for sushi)

For variety I did a little miso tahini dressing and had some Quinoa Cauliflower sushi too. So here it is.

Quinoa Avocado & Cauliflower Sushi

  • A third of a cup of red quinoa- 28g/1oz
  • Two thirds of a cup of regular quinoa- 84g/ 30z
  • Approx. three cups of water
  • Two ripe avocados
  • Half a head of cauliflower
  • Third of a teaspoon of himalayan pink salt / sea salt
  • Good quality nori strips / nori sheets. I use Clearspring an English brand

Miso Tahini Dressing

  • A big teaspoon of sweet miso paste
  • A dessertspoonful of runny dark tahni
  • Two cloves of crushed/finely chopped garlic
  • A paper thin inch slice of organic ginger finely chopped
  • A few twist of black pepper
  • A third of a cup of cold pressed sesame or olive oil
  • A dash of mirin
  • A dash of apple cyder vinegar
  • Optional: half a teaspoon of raw agave.

I like to dip the cauliflower in this before adding it to the sushi. This is a lovely intensely flavoured dressing, I use more oil for a lighter flavour when using it in salads. All you do is stick everything in a jar and give it a shake and voila – dressing!

Extra bits

  • Sushi ginger- naturally pickled ginger slices
  • Wasabi powder to make into a paste- instructions will be on the pot.
  • Gluten free tamari or shoyu sauce- naturally fermented

A note on these, try and find a good quality ginger. Sometimes the pink is from an artificial colouring. Check your tamari/shoyu for added sugar and for horrid caramel colouring.You can get wasabi paste too, again watch out for unwanted nasties!

I was quite intimidated by the idea of making sushi. I can honestly say there is no need to be. I am lucky in that a Japanese friend of mine did a demonstration at the health shop I work in and de-mystfied it for me. Hopefully I can do that for you too!

Sushi method

I like to use a wide based saucepan for cooking the quinoa. The water seems to be taken up faster. Put the pot on dry at a medium high heat. Throw the quinoa into the dry pan to toast. Boil a kettle of water while keeping an eye on the quinoa. Give the odd stir or shake. Toasting the quinoa burns off the natural saponins, these make the seeds a little bitter and unappealing to insects. Burning it off improves the tastes and makes it easier to digest.  When it starts to pop or smell like it is cooking you can add the water. Normally you would add two cups, you will need two and a half because some will steam off initially. Add a your salt. You will need to keep an eye on it. When the water starts reducing you can add another half a cup. In the end it will probably take 25mins until it is nice and fluffy.

fluffy fluffy quinoa

fluffy fluffy quinoa

While the quinoa is cooking you can get on with prepping other stuff. Clean and chop your cauliflower. It will take about ten minutes to steam, you want it to cool a little before putting in the sushi so I just put it straight on.

Prepare your avocado, cutting into slices so it will easily fit in your sushi rolls.

messy board with avocado

messy board with avocado

Assemblage

I used the prepared sushi strips- that are toasted and cut. You need two for a piece so you stick them together with a dab of water. I used a dessertspoon of quinoa and two little pieces of avocado or cauliflower. Roll top down tightly. Roll bottom up and stick with a dab of water.

I serve my sushi with a little bowl of cauliflower that be dipped in the dressing, so I only used a little bit to make sushi. You need small little broken off florets. Dip in the dressing and add to the quinoa.

construction

construction. Roll top down and bottom up and stick with water

I also used the long nori sheet which you need to hold a bit above a warm oven ring to toast lightly (it will wrinkle a little and slightly change colour). Put your quinoa along the middle. Add your avocado.

sushi roll

sushi roll

avec la avocado

avec la avocado

rollin'

rollin’

It is all about rolling it tightly with the big roll. Don’t be afraid to fill to the edge. Better to have some fall out than not have enough. Roll up first. Roll the top down, brush the edge with the lightest touch of water so it will stick. I used a sharp serrated knife as I was not brave enough to dramatically chop with a cleaver. I managed to cut them unevenly but still yummy.

Pepare your plates. Put the rest of your cauliflower florets in a little bowl. Put some tamari or shoyu in a dipping bowl. Put out your Miso Tahini dressing, your wasabi and pickled ginger.  Find the chopsticks at the back of your cutlery drawer. Hey ho you are ready to go!

Quinoa sushi dinner!

Quinoa sushi dinner!

Xs Aissa

Sunshine, salad, kale and strawberries.

18 Wednesday Jun 2014

Posted by Aissa in juice, Natural Health, Savoury, Superfoods, Vegan, yoga

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Juice, Natural Health, Savoury, Superfoods, Vegan, Yoga

O what a glorious few days of sun we have had. Got up into the high twenties (low 80sF). I got home from work, dropped shopping, jumped into shorts and was out the door. Sun, sun, sun sun O how I adore the big glowing ball of radiation! I practiced my yoga outdoors again, curling my toes in the warm grass. I reached up into the solid blue sky in my shoulder stand. I was extremely warm but also the heat increased my flexibility, my happiness to be in the good weather may have helped too! A lovely hour practice- including sun salutes as I mentioned in my last post- as it seemed rude not to 😉

I listened to the radio, read and just lay there for another hour and a half, as if there was nothing else I had to do. You have to take the sun when you can get it here in Ireland. You never know when the clouds will reappear.

I am still doing my healthy juice a day. I wanted something super green! I had eaten a plum and green apple while laying in the grass. I decided that was enough fruit so made a veg based one. It is CRAZY green and REALLY NOT sweet. So much so I had a beautiful ripe strawberry with it to balance it out. Now that I’m typing I’m thinking I could have diluted it… but eh!

kale and strawberry

kale and strawberry

Kale and Stawberries etc.

  • Four leaves and stalks of flat kale (cavolo nero)
  • A bunch of wheatgrass just under one inch in diameter (approx 2cm)
  • Three small carrots (equal to one large)
  • An inch long 1mm(.05inch) thick piece of organic ginger*
  • Half that amount of turmeric root
  • A couple of mint leaves
  • Optional: a quarter teaspoon of magnesium to balance the oxalic acid in the kale
  • Two ripe strawberries- to eat with the juice
  • I recommend diluting it with some water or water kefir

*organic as sometimes non-organic can have been irradiated

I made a salad with organic leaves, sunflower sprouts and miso

Organic salad

Organic salad

 

 

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

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 🙂

 

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