or 'things to eat that don't have dead stuff in them'

Monday 21 December 2009

Summer Lentil Salad

Ingredients:
1 can brown lentils (or brown lentils you have soaked and stuff)
half a bulb of fennel, finely sliced
handful or two of sugar snap peas, blanched in boiling water then quickly run under a cold tap
half a red capsicum, roughly chopped
a cucumber, chopped into chunks
a handful or two of tiny cheery tomatoes or grape tomatoes
4 radishes, finely sliced
small handful of parsley, chopped
tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped
small handful mint, chopped

half a lemon, squeezed
half a lime, squeezed
a good splash of olive oil
1 small chilli, desseded and chopped
1 small garlic clove, very finely chopped

slices of fried haloumi (optional. is still delicious without it for vegany joy! avocado slices would work too. or a dollop of humous)
or feta

You could also add baby spinach to bulk it up! or chick peas if that's your thing.

Chuck everything in a bowl and mix!
Serve topped with fried haloumi slices or feta or avocado or humous.

...

Monday 30 November 2009

birthday brunch baked eggs

So, it was the girlfriend's birthday recently and I wanted to impress with brunch.*

*may or may not translate as, wanted to try out a new recipe on someone.

I did what I often do when I want to try something new - in this case, baked eggs. I googled and I looked at all my recipe books. Then I closed the books and the computer and thought about what I like I make something up based on what I've read.

The result was the "best birthday breakfast" she'd ever had.

Serves 2

Ingredients:
1 small onion
1 clove garlic
teaspoon paprika
splash tabasco
splash balsamic
1 red capsicum
bunch english spinach
handful kalamata olives, seeded and chopped
handful mushrooms, chopped
75 grams danish feta, crumbled
2 tablespoons canned tomatoes (or chopped fresh)
2 eggs
grated parmesan
pine nuts
chopped chives
chopped jalapenos (to serve)

lebanese bread
za'atar

1. fry onion and garlic in olive oil til soft but not brown
2. add mushrooms and saute
3. add slice capsicum, spinach, tomatoes and spices
4. add tabasco and balsamix
5. allow to cool a little then spoon into ramekins, adding crumbled feta
6. make a little well in the vege mix and crack in 1 egg per ramekin
7. sprinkle over grated parmesan, pine nuts and chopped chives
8. bake on high for about half an hour or until egg whites have firmed, cheese has melted and yolk is still a bit runny
9. meanwhile rub olive oil into lebanese bread and sprinkle generously with za'atar then grill until crispy
10. serve eggs sprinkled with extra chives and chopped pickled jalapenos, with za'atar bread to dip

smashed pea, feta and dill crostini

So this little delight isn't mine (though the dairy-free version is). I got it from my housemate's cookbook which I can't find right now but will find later in order to reference... I couldn't resist a recipe with the word "smashed" in the title!

These are delicious and have been met with much appreciation whenever served. And better yet, they are so easy.

serves 4

Ingredients:
a loaf of bread (good bread like sourdough or rye or at least something fresh and bakery bought!)
2 cups peas (the recipe called for fresh but I have used frozen and it's great)
about 150g danish feta
a tablespoon chooped fresh dill
2 small cloves garlic
1 lemon
olive oil
rock / sea salt and pepper

for dairy-free version:
1 potato
3 dill pickled gherkins
a teaspoon of whole egg mayonnaise


1. In a mortar and pestle, smash the garlic and dill with rock / sea salt and a splash of olive oil.
2. Add the peas, handful at a time, depending on your mortar size. You'll need to scoop out each handful into a bowl as you smash them. Smash them into a paste, but keep some intact for texture. Each batch you smash should get a little splash of olive oil as well.
3. Once you've smashed all the peas, crumble in danish feta and stir through. You don't want big lumps, but a big lumpy, yummy mixture a bit like mashed potato.
4. Toast your bread, rub with a little olive oil and rub with a halved garlic glove (cut side down)
5. Mountain on the pea mush - be generous!
6. Squeeze lemon over the crostini, crack pepper on top, garnish with a sprig of dill (or some finely diced tomato) and serve.

For the dairy-free version:
1. Chop potato into tiny cubes and boil until softened but still firm.
2. Mix with mayo and gherkin when cool.
3. Stir through instead of feta.

Vegan version:
Use vegan mayo or a bit of avocado would be nice too.

Sunday 29 November 2009

tofu, leek and mushroom bake

Last night I had dinner at Yulli's a new(ish) vegetarian place on Crown St. The food was ok, not amazing, but filling and varied and tasy and most importantly, we were able to have an entire vegan meal for my brother's phd celebrations.

Anyway we had some mushroom, leek and ginger dumplings and they were good, but over-gingered. So tonight I decided to make something similar (as bake not dumplings as am tired after work).

and so here it is. it is neither exact nor measured as it is a thrown together dinner. and it is one of those chuck-in-what's-in-the-cupboard-and-see-wholefood type deals.

Ingredients:
1 onion
2 cloves garlic
a nob of ginger (about the size of two thumbs)
good splash of soy
dessert spoon of kecap manis
spices (i used about half a teaspoon of mild curry powder, cumin, paprika)
1 leek
about 12 mushrooms (button or swiss brown or field...)
cauliflower and/or broccoli (optional - I used cos I had some in the fridge, any veges would be fine)
250g soft tofu
a cup of breadcrumbs (i make my own with leftover bread)
sesame seeds
1 egg (optional. dish is vegan without the egg)

1. Fry the onion, ginger, garlic and leek in sesame or peanut oil (vegetable oil if you must)
2. Add mushrooms and other vegetables if using as well as sauces and spices
3. Stir fry for a while and crumble in tofu, stirring to combine flavours and cook a bit. You could eat it at this point as scramble tofu, but I wanted something different.
4. Oil a casserole dish and add vegetables
5. Mix bread crumbs with salt and a pinch of each of the spices and top the casserole with crumbs.
6. (optional) Whisk the egg and drizzle over.
7. Sprinkle over sesame seeds.
8. Bake until browned and crispy. Eat!


GF: to make gluten-free use gluten-free bread or skip the bread and use lots of sesame seeds. If you want carbs in there, mix through cooked brown rice or quinoa. Yum!

...

Tuesday 16 June 2009

lemony veges with feta salsa

I made this delicious fresh dinner tonight when the people I sent to the shops for pepper forgot to take their phones and so I couldn't call them and tell them to get butter for the lemon / butter / pepper sauce I was hoping to make. I wanted dairy in the dinner so came up with this:

Ingredients (serves 2):
3 cloves garlic
1 small white onion
1 large fennel bulb
1 bunch asparagus
a handful of mushrooms (swiss brown best or field)
handful spinach leaves
juice of 1 lemon
lots of cracked black pepper

for the salsa:
crumbled bulgarian sheep's milk feta*
a tomato, diced
a handful of mint leaves chopped

1. Dice the onion very small and fry gently in olive oil to soften

2. Add sliced mushrooms, fennel & garlic and fry til vegetabled soften and the mushrooms start to brown a little

3. Pour in lemon juice and add spinach and asparagus

4. Stir Fry for a while, but ensure vegetables are al dente - have a bit of crunch

5. Stir together salsa ingredients and serve salsa on top of the veges.

* A Note on Feta:
The kind of feta you use is important and if a recipe just calls for feta, it is stupid (unless I have done that in previous recipes...I am not stupid...) Seriously though there is such a difference in flavour and texture and fetas respond differently to heat. I like danish feta for cooking (especially sauces) as it melts well, bulgarian feta is beautiful as it is crumbly AND creamy, whereas Greek feta is great in salads as it is firm and salty.

...

Sunday 31 May 2009

coffee fruit 'n nut cake

My mothers were good cooks in a hearty, early vegetarianism way. We had solid staples: curry, vege shepherds pie, pizza, pasta with tomato sauce, soup, nutroast... In the 90s we discovered the stir fry and by my late teens they were getting all fancy like and making cajun tofu with mango salsa 'n shit.

But an area where they were particularly skilled (in my opinion) was the hearty cake. Before they had moved to Haberfield and been inspired to make italian ricotta cake (or found ethics and hit on the vegan cupcakes), they made Barm Brack: a super hearty fruit cake with just fruit, tea, sugar, eggs and flower in it. I loved it and never understood why Louise ruined the formula each Christmas by adding alcohol, peel, spices and icing.

I've been meaning to make Barm Brack for years and finally hit up Teresa for the recip yesterday. But I couldn't bring myself not to get inventive so my altered recipe is below. To make the original, ditch the nuts and spices and swap the coffee for tea! Nice and English.

Ingredients:
1.5 cups dried fruit (I used raisins, currants, turkish apricots and chopped figs)
1 cup brown sugar
1.75 cups coffee (I used cafetiere coffee, not too strong)
1 egg
1.25 cups self-raising flour
1 cup chopped nuts (I use almonds and hazelnuts)
1 teaspoon ginger powder
1 teaspoon cinnamon

DAY 1
1. Make coffee and then let it cool.
2. Pour coffee over fruit, stir in sugar and leave to soak overnight.
Incidentally I forgot to let the coffee cool and I forgot to add the sugar til the next day, but it worked just fine all the same.

DAY 2
preheat oven to 175 celcius
3. Beat the egg and stir into mixture.

4. Sift flour and stir in.
5. Beat well - by hand is sufficient.
6. Add nuts and spices.
7. Pour into pre-greased loaf tin and place in oven.
8. Bake for 1hr 45 mins or until cooked - keep an eye on it. When you can insert a knife and it comes out clean it's done.

The results are divine. Divine I say!

Great warm with butter!

Next time I'm adding chocolate chips!!!!!

...

Saturday 30 May 2009

sweet potato and blue cheese muffins

so these delicious muffins have been adapted from a recipe Annabelle gave me...though I have, as is my habit, changed them substantially and added a bunch of extra ingredients...The original recipe had pumpkin, blue cheese, flour and egg...mine has -

Ingredients (makes 12):
400g chopped sweet potato
160g self raising flour
juice of a lemon
4 eggs
2 cloves garlic
half an onion
splash balsamic vinegar
splash tabasco
80g blue cheese
a handle of spinach leaves chopped
handful chopped parsley
tablespoon chopped rosemary
handful crushed walnuts
handful toasted pinenuts (fry in a dry pan or pop under the grill til browning)
olive oil for frying
salt & pepper

preheat oven to 200 celcius

1. boil the chopped sweet potato

2. meanwhile, fry the finely chopped onion and garlic in olive oil til softened then splash in tabasco and balsamic

3. when sweet potato is soft, mash it and mix it with the onion and garlic and lemon juice

4. leave the potato mixure to cool - it's important it isn't hot or it will cook the eggs when you add them!

5. once the mixture is cool, stir in the eggs (beaten before you add them) and the flour

6. add the nuts and herbs and spinach and stir to combine

7. season with salt & pepper

8. spoon half the mixture into muffin trays, place a nob of blue cheese in the centre of each muffin and then spoon mixture over the top to cover the cheese

9. bake in oven til starting to brown a little (took me about 25 minutes!)

these are great warm or cold. the blue cheese is pretty rich. if you don't like blue try a goat or feta. omnomnomnom!!!

...

tvp and noodle stir fry

So I've never cooked this tvp business before but a workmate bought some and didn't like it so she gave it to me. It's never a good sign when someone dislikes something so much they give it away, but I was willing to give the stuff a go even if it does look like dog food.

So! I made tvp stir fry and while the texture is a bit strange it's nice to have tofu in a different way and I'll probably use it again, though perhaps not often.

I haven't put very exact quantities (as if I ever do), because stir fries are so haphazard for me.

Ingredients:
1 cup tvp (you need to soak it in 1 cup boiling water for 5mins, I put a quarter of a vege stock cube in too)
rice noodles
3 cloves garlic, chopped finely
small nob ginger, grated
small stick lemongrass, chopped finely
half an onion, chopped
1 red chilli
broccoli broken into florets
red capsicum, chopped
mushrooms, sliced
soy sauce
kecap manis
juice of half a lemon
sesame oil (or vege oil)

1. soak the tvp
2. meanwhile, fry onion, garlic, chilli, ginger and lemongrass in sesame til softened but not browned
3. add mushrooms
4. when mushies are starting to brown, add tvp
5. add soy, kecap manis, lemon
6. fry for a while
7. add broccoli and capsicum (and, well, any other veges you like)
8. add noodles, toss and fry

*this one isn't rocket science but it was my first go with tvp so i wanted to give it a post*
...

Thursday 21 May 2009

Alanta's Stuffed Eggplants

My lovely housemate Alanta left so we thought we'd throw her a dinner party. One of her favourite things is eggplant and thus, these stuffed eggplants were born.

Though, as with any recipe, acknowledgements are never so simple a one person's favourite veg. The stuffing stems from a rice bake my friend Amy used to make in high school...combined with a jaffle I had at a queer porn film fest a few weeks back.

YUM.

serves 8

Ingredients:
4 large eggplants
2 cups (uncooked quantity) brown rice
1 large onion
4 cloves garlic (depending how much you like garlic...)
button mushrooms
big bunch english spinach
2 tablespoons tahini
2 tablespoons soy sauce
3 blocks danish feta (sorry i don't know grams, a block should be about the size of your palm, and about an inch thick...)
a handful chopped parsley
good splash tabasco
seasoning (i use salt, pepper, cumin and paprika)
sesame seeds and parmesan to garnish

1. Halve each eggplant lengthways. Rest it on its side first to see where it will comfortably sit then slice lengthways accordingly.

2. You need to scoop out the flesh of the eggplant leaving about 1cm in. Use a small sharp knife and carve out the majority, setting it aside (you will use it). I then smoothed and got the leftovers with a spoon.

3. Salt the eggplant (innards and shells) and set aside. After 10 mins or so wash and press dry.

4. Chop garlic and onion and fry in olive til soft but not browned.

5. Add chopped mushrooms and eggplant and fry for a while to soften and mingle the flavours.

6. Meanwhile, cook the brown rice. I am lazy and use a rice cooker!

7. Stir together the rice, eggplant, mushrooms, spinach, feta* and flavours (tahini, salt & pepper etc)

8. When the filling is cold, add crumbled feta and parsley

9. Stuff eggplant halves with the mixture and place on oiled baking trays. Splash oil over the eggplants (this will speed up cooking, give a nice crispy skin and flavour).

10. Sprinkle the tops with parmesan and sesame seeds.

11. Bake til cases have softened and the top is browned and crispy.

Monday 18 May 2009

omelettemuffins!

I saw a recipe in a magazine somewhere for omelettemuffins (my title not theirs). The premise is simple. Omelettes in muffin trays. BEST EVER. I made some this evening based on ingredients used by Annabelle in a lovely tarte she made me when in Sydney. But possibilities are endless and I can't wait to try all kinds of omelettemuffins. these were dinner ones.

what i put in (made 6 muffins):
4 eggs
teaspoon tahini
half teaspoon honey
splash milk
broccoli and cauliflower broken into little florets
slice of pre-marinated / cooked package tofu cubed small
sprinkling of cumin
splash of tabasco
pepper and salt
a little grated cheddar and parmesan
a little dried rosemary

mix everything together in large bowl, stir well, spoon into oiled muffin tray, sprinkle with parmesan, bake at 200 degrees.

happy eating!

Thursday 14 May 2009

Moonbooty Marsden’s Marvellous Marmalade

I quit my law degree a couple of weeks ago. I sum it up with the stolen phrase “capacity does not equal desire.” My fellow law-school-drop-out Hill said, rather wittily might I add, “I would rather spend the next 6 years making marmalade than building up a HECS debt.

So we made marmalade.

Got a recipe of the net. The times were wrong and we changed it to suit our taste. We made a shitload and have been handing it around town, but it was tres popular so we’ll need to make more.

I WILL UPDATE THIS WHEN I TRY SOME MORE CHANGES AND MAKE IT BETTER.

Ingredients:
• 2kg Onions (we used brown)
• 6 cloves garlic
• 3 chillis (ours weren’t strong so we added a few pinches of dried flakes, depends on your taste and the strength of your chillis)
• 1 tables spoon fresh thyme
• 200
ml Port
• 750ml red wine (we used shiraz)
• 350ml red wine vinegar (you could use a bit less than this as ours was acidic)
• 4 tables spoons olive oil (you'll need an extra 100ml or so to make up for the butter)
• 140g caster suga
r (next time I am using brown as I think it’ll give a richer flavour)
• pepper and salt

they said 140g butter though next time I am just using olive oil = vegan, plus the butter is visible in the jars so not pretty. so yeah. don't use butter.


1. Chop the onions. Cry (unless you are the sensibly snorkelled Hill!) Cut them in half and then finely slice into semi circles.
2. Finely chop the garlic, chilli and thyme.
3. Heat the oil in a large sauce pan with the oil, and then add the onions, garlic and chilli.
4. Stir all still covered in oil and starting to soften.
5. Sprinkle over sugar, thyme, salt, pepper and splash Tabasco.
6. Now you slow cook the onions. The recipe called for 40-50mins. We needed closer to an hour and a half. The recipe said the juices needed to evaporate. Butter doesn’t really evaporate. Flawed!
7. But this is true: “The onions are ready when they're really soft and sticky. They should be so soft that they break when pressed against the side of the pan with a wooden spoon. Slow cooking is the secret of really soft and sticky onions, so don't rush this part.”
8. Pour in the wine, vinegar and port and simmer everything, still uncovered, over a high heat, stirring every so often until the onions are a deep mahogany colour and the liquid has reduced by about two-thirds. The idiots at some internet site said 30mins. Pah! Closer to an hour! Or more!9. It's done when drawing a spoon across the bottom of the pan clears a path that fills rapidly with syrupy juice. Leave the onions to cool in the pan, then scoop into sterilised jars and seal.

Can be eaten straight away, but keeps in the fridge for up to 3 months.

Yum! Really good with vintage cheddar and crackers, or dolloped onto an omelette or on salad or tart or on a vege pie bought late at night with friends. Or by the spoonful if you’re my friend Lisa.

Monday 27 April 2009

roast beetroot, sweet potato and haloumi salad

This is the love child of a donna hay recipe I read last year (oh how I miss living with Liz and her subscription) and a nadine abensur one I tested out on friends a couple of weeks ago. Both originals are divine, but the donnay hay is very filling and fatty and the nadine abensur was a bit oily and work intensive (who has time to make dukka when they get home at 6pm?)

Anyway, this is a combo of the two, but with my own touches (e.g. the sweet potato, which goes so well and looks so pretty...)

feeds 4

Ingredients:
4 Beetroot
2 Sweet potato (equal amount to beetroot)
Greens (not lettuce!): Baby Spinach, Rocket, Green Beans and/or Asparagus
3 cloves Garlic
dessert spoon of brown sugar
large handful of fresh sage leaves (must be fresh)
400-500g of haloumi (depending on whether it's a main or not, you can add / subtract haloumi)
good splash tabasco
olive oil
salt & pepper
juice of 1 lemon
half handful chopped parsley

1. Roughly chop sweet potato and beetroot and place in a baking dish (if you are serving at a dinner party and want it pretty use two baking dish, dividing the ingredients that follow so that the beetroot doesn't dye the potato pink)
2. Crush garlic and add to dish
3. Sprinkle over brown sugar, salt & pepper
4. Spread whole sage leaves through mixture
5. Splash with tabasco
6. Then splash with olive oil so that the veges are shiny and coated but not swimming in the stuff!
7. Use your hands to rub the flavourings into the veges making sure that garlic, sage etc are evenly spread around the dish
8. Bake at 180 degrees (celsius) for about half an hour-40 mins or until veges are cooked, but not mushy at all! It's nice when there is a firmness to the beetroot (though the potato can be super soft...mmmmm)

Just before they're cooked...

9. Arrange greens on plate
10. Fry sliced haloumi (in chunky chip sized pieces or larger if you prefer)
11. Pile roasted veges on the greens, place haloumi on top, sprinkle with parsley, squeeze on lemon juice and serve!

Notes re originals:
The Donna Hay was the above vege roasting process, but only with beetroot and cooked slower. Then the beetroot was placed on top of fettucine that had parmesan, marscapone and goats cheese melted through it. This is DIVINE.

The Nadine Abensur was with beetroot and fennel roasted with oil (too much oil), garlic, tabasco, salt, pepper. Then you stirred through dukkah and parsley and served on a bed of rocket with haloumi pieces and lemon squeezed over the top.

Monday 20 April 2009

tomato, sage and vege pasta

I made this for dinner, based on what was in the fridge and which herbs in the garden were looking most bountiful. It was surprisingly delicious for something thrown together so I thought I'd share.

Ingredients:
- Pasta (I used spinach spaghetti)
- Button Mushrooms
- Peas
- about 4 fresh sage leaves per person, chopped small
- a teaspoon of brown sugar
- half an onion, diced very small
- a cup of oven roasted tomato sauce (posted below) or any simple tomato / garlic pasta sauce
goats cheese to garnish (I stand by Meredith Marinated Goats Cheese as the best goats cheese, indeed the best cheese maybe in Australia)

1. Fry onion mushrooms and sage in olive oil (if you have sensibly purchased Meredith cheese, use a little of the oil in comes marinated in. I never chuck out this oil but use it for salad dressings and sauces. Fry for about 5 minutes

2. Sprinkle brown sugar into the mixture and fry for a further 5 minutes.

3. Add sauce and peas and cook to combine.

4. Cook pasta and then add to sauce and mix to combine.

5. Crumble goats cheese over the top and eat! Yum!

Tuesday 14 April 2009

what to do with a fuckload of tomatoes

Tish and I went dumpster diving on Friday. I shall elect NOT to rant and rave about how depressing it was to see an abundance of wasted food chucked into dumpsters, nor shall I mention that it is a travesty that some shops lock their dumpsters so the food cannot be taken, that they would rather it wasted than consumed by those who cannot afford their produce.*

* I am aware that I can
afford their produce and am considering taking the majority of what I find next time to charity. This was my first dumpster dive so more of an information seeking mission, a site visit if you will.

I shall instead tell you what I did with the wealth of fresh (fridge fresh!) roma tomatoes we found in Petersham. Four boxes we filled, FOUR BOXES.

I made:

SLOW ROASTED TOMATOES

Ingredients:
Roma Tomatoes
Olive Oil
Salt & Pepper

Flavourings: I did 'Paprika and Tabasco' and 'Caramelised Balsamic' but world really is your oyster (or rather your tomato)

Preheat oven to 120 degrees celcius

1. Halve the tomatoes lengthways, as in the knife should slice through the little green core bit at the top where the tomato was attached to the plant - what's that called anyway?
(obviously WASH them first if they've been in a dumpster)
2. Cut out the 'core' - basically the middle bit and the seeds. You don't need to be to careful, just get the main middle section out!
3. Lay them on a tray on baking paper, skin side down.
4. Splash with a little olive oil (not too much) and then sprinkle with salt and pepper.

Now you could cook them now (as per instructions below) or you could add flavourful fun. Up to you.

5. For the brown sugar and balsamic, I just splashed and sprinkled the two on - not too much. Likewise with the paprika and tabasco. You could try herbs (used dried though - more flavour) or chilli or curry or anything. But nothing that will burn if cooked for a long time, like cheese or garlic.

6. Put tomatoes in the oven and cook very slowly, at 120 or even lower if you have a fan forced oven - 100 celcius perhaps.

7. Cook for about 3-4 hours, but watch them to make sure they don't burn and turn them over if the skin starts to char. I often then turn off the oven and leave them in it overnight, drying out til morning.

Eat!


OVEN ROASTED TOMATO SAUCE

Ingredients:
Roma Tomatoes
Garlic (about 1 garlic clove to every 5 tomatoes)
Olive Oil
Salt

1. Slice just the tops off the roma tomatoes (don't chop too much!) - by tops i mean just the bit where the tomato was joined to the vine.
2. Cut the garlic cloves into slivers lenthways (each clove into 4-5 pieces) and wedge the slivers into the top of the tomatoes til they are embedded (into the soft, seedy part in the centre)
3. Places the tomatoes in a casserole dish and splash liberally with olive oil (quite a lot, but not so they are swimming in the stuff!)
4. Sprinkle on salt
5. Slow roast at 120 degrees for 3 hours, do not let them char at all!
6. Blend til smooth, and then use as pasta sauce, pizza sauce, dipping sauce or on vegetables, in lasagne, on poached eggs etc etc. Change the flavour by adding herbs, balsamic vinegar, or whatever you like in sauce!


RANDOM FACT:
I played a tomato in a musical in second year uni. My first line was 'And I am a tomato.'

Tuesday 7 April 2009

My Wish List

or 'I wish I were Richer'
or 'buy me presents?'

1. a big heavy mortar and pestle. i think whizzy things with blades are over rated. and i like the violence and mess of a mortar and pestle.

2. knives. i have one beautiful, expensive knife bought for me by clever housemates last year, but oh how i would like a set. in a pretty block with a knife sharpener.

3. muffin trays. these aren't expensive. i should just go and buy them really.

4. a fondue set like Amanda had in Switzerland. god it was beautiful. big heavy ceramic pot with an elegant burner underneath. and the cheese fondue she made in it was better than sex.

5. a lifetime supply of meredith marinated goats cheese.

6. teaspoons. we don't have any. i am thinking of having a 'bring a teaspoon party' inspired by Soccer Girl.

7. a pressure cooker

8. a strainer. it's mildly ridiculous i haven't bought one for the new house. i keep just 'making do.' they cost $3. ridiculous.

9. a bar mix. i don't like lumpy soup.

10. a compost bin and a big supply of flower pots and seedlings and someone with gardening skills to get the vege / herb garden going. wife needs a farmer.

fuck i love kitchenware

Sunday 5 April 2009

Basic Vege Pasta Formula 1

I'm often disappointed by vegetarian cookbooks and restaurants when they are packed with dishes I could've come up with myself, dishes that involve really obvious combinations of flavours (you mean spinach and feta go well together??? No! what a surprise!)

A recently purchased exception to this is 'enjoy' by Nadine Abensur - just reading it makes my mouth water and nearly every recipe is something new to me in flavour, form, process or presentation (Saturday night's attempt - Roast Beetroot & Fennel with dukkah, croutons and griddled haloumi was a bit oily but I think I can improve it on second try).

But I forget in my whingeing that not everyone grew up vegetarian and not everyone was throwing dinner parties at age 12. So here's one of my basic pasta formulae. It's not really original - it incorporates recipes read, experiments done and the Viv Butter Secret* (and it always changes according to what is in the fridge). But it's good and a great place to start for beginners wanting to add more veges to their diet. It's also great if you have small amounts of a variety of vegetables in the fridge.

* the Viv Butter Secret: for months I tried to recreate my friend Viv's version of this pasta, but mine never really lived up to hers and her kitchen was too small for me to sneakily watch over her shoulder while she made it for me. Finally I squashed my pride and asked her secret. Butter, she said. A shitload of butter. Now some people may not like the pasta so rich but if you are indulging, then fry the vegetables in a big knob of butter rather than a little bit of olive oil, which I use normally.


BASIC PASTA FORMULA
to make vegan, omit cheese or use soy cheese - it'll still be great!

Ingredients:


1. pasta (any kind you like)
2. Garlic
3. Onion (optional)
4. Vegetables, which hold their colour and shape well. I recommend: broccoli, asparagus, green beans, peas, mushrooms, cherry tomatoes, roasted pumpkin or sweet potato, baby spinach, rocket, sweet corn...the list goes on...
5. Cheese. I recommend: Danish feta (it melts better than greek or australian) / goats cheese, blue cheese (gorgonzola, stilton, roquefort etc) or mozarella and parmesan (grated parmesan or romano should always be included, as well as one of the above if you like)
6. Herbs. Parsley, chives, oregano and rosemary work well. If using feta cheese, I really recommend, thyme and mint (and add some lemon juice!!! and even a little chilli!)
7. Salt & Pepper

Process:
1. Fry 1-2 cloves garlic, a little diced onion and chopped mushrooms (if using) in olive oil (or butter! see above) in a deep pan on a low heat
2. Chuck in whatever vegetables you are using, chopped into bite size pieces.
3. Stir fry fro about 10 minutes - the vegetables must not be overcooked and should still have a little crunch. Don't be afraid to taste test to check this!
4. Turn off the heat and then sprinkle /crumble your cheese (grate if it is in a block) over the vegetables. Don't stir through yet, just let the cheese sit melting on top of the hot vegetables.
5. Boil water for pasta and cook according to packet instructions. I test pasta along to way to check for when it is cooked, as instructions aren't always right. You want it al dente (which means NOT overcooked)
6. Turn heat back on vegetables. If they have run out of liquid add butter, oil or a little pasta water to help the cheese melt to a sauce.
7. Add chopped herbs.
8. Drain pasta and add to veges/cheese stirring til combined.
9. Eat with freshly grated parmesan.

Most of all, experiment. Try different herbs. Try lemon juice. A splash of balsamic vinegar or white balsamic vinegar. Chilli. Sour cream. Whatever else you think of!

Thursday 2 April 2009

tips for kids

Bridget asked for vegetarian recipes for kids. don't have time for recipes right now but here are some tips:

1. Hide the Health: vege burgers, vege burgers, vege burgers. A good lentil or tofu burger always works cos it has sauce and cheese and salad and is messy and fun. That's how my parents got me to eat my lentils.

2. Colour: lentils and beans and such can be murky and brown when served to kids as dahl or stew. Try them in a colourful salad, or blend them into tomato or pumpkin soup (with cheesy toast) or at least put something colourful next to them!

3. Dips: here you can get kids to eat vege sticks AND good vitamins by way of humous, avocado, canellini bean dip etc.

4. Encourage kids to participate: get them to google a vegetarian recipe with things they like in it and then cook it together. In the same vein, buy vegetarian cookbooks with lots of pictures for them to get excited and choose stuff they like.

5. Vegetarian Pizza: yum.

6. Make a night of it: Find a local vegetarian restaurant and take the kids there.

Middle Eastern Orange Cake

Gluten Free! But not vegan...sorry

This is an absolute steal, not mine at all. But it is SUCH a good cake and someone (Hi Audrey!) emailed me, asking if I knew anything wheat free, so it seemed an opportune time to post. I have a similar recipe at home using pistachios but haven't had the time to try it out. Will do though!

NB: don't do as my mum did the other day and leave the oranges on the stove while you go out for a glass of wine. Charred oranges - no fun!

This is AWESOME served with chocolate gelato...mmm...


Claudia Roden's Middle Eastern Orange Cake

From Stephanie Alexander's The Cook's Companion

2 large oranges, washed
6 eggs, beaten
250g ground almonds
250g sugar
1 teaspoon baking powder

Boil oranges, barely covered with water, in a covered saucepan for 2 hours. Allow to cool, then cut open, remove pips and chop roughly, including the rind.

Preheat oven to 190°C and butter and flour a 24cm springform tin. Blend oranges and eggs thoroughly in a food processor. Mix ground almonds, sugar and baking powder in a bowl, then add orange mixture and whisk to combine. Pour batter into prepared tin and bake for 45 minutes - 1 hour. If cake is still very wet, cook a little longer. Cool in tin before gently turning out.

Tuesday 31 March 2009

Peanut Sauce

(vegan)

I've been making variations of this sauce for years and love it on salad or steamed veges or as a dipping sauces for summer rolls or even vege sticks. It's based on the ubiquitous peanut sauce of Sydney Thai restaurants. Innocently ignorant I rocked up in Thailand in 2004, with visions of bathing in the stuff...only to find that it is NOT Thai at all. More Indonesian really. Or an invention of Westernised 'Asian' food.

Who cares? It's fucking good -

Ingredients:
a splash of sesame oil
1 chilli, finely chopped (more or less according to taste)
2 cm cubed nob of fresh ginger
3 cloves garlic
1 onion (optional)
1/3 cup soy sauce
3 heaped tablespoons of peanut butter*
a splash of kecap manis (if you like it sweet)
200ml coconut milk (optional, according to taste and waistline...can use water to thin the sauce)

* I like crunchy peanut butter and would even go so far as to add extra crushed nut. It's up to you really, whether you use crunchy or not, but I think the nuts add texture. Smooth is better for a dipping sauce. Or if you want something lighter, just use crushed nuts.

1. Chop garlic, chilli and onions very finely and grate the ginger.
2. Fry these in sesame oil til softened but not brown.
3. Add the peanut butter and stir until combined
4. Gradually add the soy sauce, combining it with the peanut mixture
5. Add in the coconut milk (the first time you make it, put a little then test and repeat this til you get it to the richness that YOU like)

Stand aside while you cook rice, steam veges etc. Or make a salad with boiled eggs and pour over that for Gado Gado salad. Or make summer rolls.

Tip: I like to squeeze lemon juice over my steamed veges or salad as the acid contrasts really well with the sweetness / heat of the sauce.

Warm Herby Potato and Haloumi Salad

To make vegan, lose the haloumi.

Serves 4

Ingredients (my measurements aren’t exact. If you need stricter instructions…sorry):
• 20 baby new potatoes
• 1 large red capsicum
• About 200g of green beans or peas or both
• A punnet of Cherry Tomatoes
• A big bunch Baby or English Spinach
• Haloumi (1-2 packets, depending on your guests’ hunger and love of cheese)

For the sauce:
• Big splash of olive oil
• 2 lemons (or 1 large, really juicy one)
• 2 cloves garlic (or 3 if they are small)
• Half a white onion
• A handful of mint
• A child’s handful of thyme
• A handful of Italian / flat leaf parsley
• Pepper and Salt

1. Chop the potatoes in half or quarts (large bite size chunks) and boil in saucepan of salted water til cooked, but not mushy! When cooked, drain and place in a bowl to cool a little, but not completely – they should be warm on serving, not hot or cold.

2. Meanwhile chop the onion and garlic very finely.
3. Fry onion and garlic slowly in a generous amount of olive oil til softened but not brown.
4. Squeeze lemons and pour in lemon juice, add salt & pepper
5. Remove sauce from heat and add chopped herbs, stirring and leaving to stand in the frypan.

6. Chop capsicum into large slices – just the four sides, thus removing the core but leaving the pieces big. Grill capsicum on a high heat til charred.
7. Leave til sufficiently cool to peel off charred skin.
8. Slice into thin strips then add to bowl with potatoes.

9. Chop green beans into 3-5cm lengths. If you like them crunchy, chuck them straight into the bowl. If not, steam them for a minute or two then add. Add peas too if you are using peas. Add baby spinach leaves.

10. Stir sauce through potato salad mix, leaving a little to drizzle on top.

11. Place portions on plates before or during frying haloumi as the cheese is best just after it has been cooked. Scatter potato salad with chopped cheery tomatoes.

12. To fry the haloumi, bring a non-stick pan to a reasonably high heat, chop the cheese into slices (about 7mm thick) and fry until brown.
13. Place haloumi slices on top of salad, drizzle a bit more sauce on and garnish with sprigs of fresh mint and parsley.

vegetarian pets???

Hi,
I was browsing on couchsurfing groups (www.couchsurfing.com) and came across a discussion on vegetarian / vegan pets. The following websites were suggested so I thought I'd post them here! My brother has been bemoaning the fact that he wants a Pug but can't have meat in the house. Maybe there's hope yet!

http://ami.aminews.net/index.php?lang=fr )

http://veggiepets.com/acatalog/vegecat_vegan_cat_food.html

http://vegforlife.org/dogscats.htm

Sydney Vege / Vegan Eats

Sydney doesn't(unfortunately) have a culture of strictly vege restaurants, however fortunately there are a lot of places with a reasonable selection of options on the menu - especially at Thai, Vietnamese or Indian restaurants.

In my opinion, the best suburbs are Newtown, Enmore and Erskineville. This is a cool area anyway, the student/alternative area with pubs, cafes, shops, markets sometimes etc. There are vegan restaurant here called Green Gourmet and Green Palace, both on King St (there is a vegan cupcake and ice cream shop next to Green Gourmet). There are also a million Thai places, the best being Suan I-San (King St). At least I think so! Doy Tao Thai, Thai Pothong, Thairiffic and Newtown Thai are also all good.

For cafes, nearly all will do soy milk. My faves, which also have vegan food, are Corelli's (King St), Martini (King St), Sofia's (Erskineville Rd) and Scrambled (Enmore Rd).

The best vege sushi is at Eat Me Sushi, on King St, opposite the Dendy Cinema.

A lot of pizza places in Newtown will do cheeseless if you ask, or gluten free bases if that's your thing.

There are also three nice and cheap African restaurants which are great. African Feeling Cafe (King St), African Express Eatery (Enmore Rd), Kathmandu (King St). All have delicious options.

Dolce & Gelato, on the corner of King & wilson St, has a whole freezer of dairy free gelatos. The chocolate sorbet is heaven. So's Lemon, Lime and Bitters. And fig. And Fatini, the manager is lovely.

For parties, Turkish Homewares on King St does big banquets in a private room at $30 a head. You can request no meat dishes and you get big plates laden with salad, bread, dips, gozleme and other goodies.

In the centre of town, near the cathedral, down some steps, all hidden in the park is the wonderful Bodhi Vegan Yum Cha. sit outside among the trees and enjoys the brilliance of never having the check if something on the cart is vege or not!

I recommend Glebe, also nearish to Newtown, where there are lovely markets on Saturday mornings/afternoons with stalls and music (and good food.)

There's a great cafe called Badde Manors, which is vegetarian on Glebe Point Rd which is the main street and if you walk the whole length (at least an hour) you eventually get to harbour and a nice big park. At the 'city' end, where it meets Parramatta Rd, there is Victoria Park, very pretty and with a swimming
pool in the centre.

On Sunday mornings there are markets on Addison Rd, Marrickville. I got a great vegan coconut and cherry muffin there yesterday... It's a lovely place!

If you are disgustingly rich, and want haute cuisine, Buon Ricordo in Paddington is an old Sydney Italian institution which does a full A4 page of vegetarian dishes, virtually unheard of at this end of the market!

Happy Eating Vegos!

Welcome to Vegepalooza

I like to bake. Thought it was time I shared my skills with the world. Here I shall post:
- vegetarian recipes (those I find and those I invent)
- tricks with vegetarian specialties (tofu, vege sausages etc)
- recommendations for vegetarian products, restaurants, websites
- answers to any vegetarianism questions you may have

bring it.