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charlottealvina

~ everyday delicious

Tag Archives: recipes

Cacao Banana Pancakes

08 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

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banana, breakfast, brunch, cacao, cocoa, pancake, recipes, vegetarian

Cacao Banana Pancakes

Ah, raw cacao powder. Adding this antioxidant-rich and nutrient-dense super food into regular pancakes takes an average weekend breakfast to fancy and healthy new heights. Put some banana slices in there too and people will wonder what you’re celebrating. Or up to. The answer, of course, is awesomeness.

Cacao Banana Pancake Ingredients

Ingredients

  • .5 cups white flour
  • .25 cups whole wheat flour
  • 1 tbsp baking powder
  • .5 tsp salt
  • 4 tsp sugar
  • 3 tbsp raw cacao powder
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 tbsp grape seed oil + more for pan
  • 1 egg
  • 1 large or 2 small bananas, sliced into thin rounds

Instructions

  1. Mix together all the dry ingredients.
  2. Mix together all the wet ingredients and beat until egg is consistent.
  3. Stir the wet ingredients into the dry until fully incorporated.
  4. Heat a pan over medium and spread a thin coat of oil on the bottom.
  5. Spoon a half cup or less of batter into pan and top with several banana slices.
  6. Flip when bubbles dot the top. The second side will cook in a fraction of the time.
  7. Serve immediately, banana-side up, with natural maple syrup if you like.

Cacao Banana Pancake with Extra Bananas

This recipe is not very sweet – best for dark chocolate lovers. Easy to adjust for any palate: increase the sugar by one or two teaspoons and/or decrease the cacao powder by same.

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Vegetarian Taco Pie

06 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

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homemade, pie, piecrust, recipes, taco, vegan taco meat, vegetarian

Vegetarian Taco Pie

Since I had a pie crust in the freezer and some vegan taco meat from earlier in the week, I made an Entirely From-Scratch Vegetarian Taco Pie. Homemade salsa, fresh guacamole, even the vegetable stock for the seitan was homemade. Not only could you taste the love, you could hear the mix tape that it made for you playing in the background.

If I don’t have vegan taco meat already made next time, I’ll try substituting refried beans and Spanish rice, which will cut down significantly on the prep time. I might work in some tomatoes, but I digress. What I’m trying to say is, taco pie, I love you, and I’m looking forward to a lifetime together.

Vegetarian Taco Pie Ingredients

Ingredients:

  • 1 9” Pie Crust
  • 1.5 cups Vegan Taco Meat (or bean substitute)
  • 1 cup Shredded Cheese (recommend sharp cheddar)
  • 1 Onion, diced
  • 4-6 Garlic Cloves, diced
  • 1 cup Mushrooms, sliced
  • .5 tsp Cumin Powder
  • .5 tsp Paprika
  • .5 tsp Chili Powder
  • 2 tbsp Grape Seed Oil
  • Sour Cream
  • Guacamole
  • Salsa

Vegetarian Taco Pie Layers

Instructions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350°.
  2. Prep crust in a 9” pie dish. Not a bad idea to pre-bake it for a few minutes, but I didn’t and it was fine.
  3. In a pan, heat the oil over medium and add the powdered spices for a few minutes to season the oil. Then add the onion and garlic and sauté for 5 minutes. Finally, add the mushrooms and sauté for another 5 minutes.
  4. Layer ingredients in the pie crust: taco meat first, then mushroom and onion mix, topped with cheese.
  5. Bake for 30-45 minutes until crust and cheese are golden brown.
  6. Serve with salsa, sour cream, and fresh guacamole (I just mush up an avocado with a couple sprinkles of chili powder and garlic salt).

Vegetarian Taco Pie

Vegan Taco Meat

05 Thursday Apr 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

homemade, meatlessmonday, recipes, seitan, taco, vegan, vegetarian

Vegan Taco Meat

In recent weeks, Americans have had a rude awakening about what’s actually in the meat served at fast food restaurants and sold in grocery stores. Pink Slime may be putting the “ew” in news lately, but the real shock is that’s anybody’s surprised. Ground beef and chicken nuggets couldn’t look less like natural pieces of animal, so they are the perfect place to hide the bits that nobody wants to see.

Our widespread cultural approach of willful ignorance about what we put in our bodies is one of many reasons I stopped eating meat. If you want to know exactly what’s in every bite of the protein on your plate, the good news is…you can just make it yourself! And although I wouldn’t categorize this as a “quick and easy” recipe, at least it doesn’t involve an industrial centrifuge.

Seitan is a protein made from wheat that you can season and shape almost any way you want. Here’s a basic seitan recipe, but this week I took it a step further and made my own vegan taco meat. This recipe yields about 4 cups, or eight servings.

Vegan Taco Meat Ingredients

Ingredients

  • 1.25 cups Vital Wheat Gluten
  • 3 tbsp Nutritional Yeast
  • 1 tbsp Onion Powder
  • 1 tbsp Garlic Powder
  • 1 tbsp Cumin Powder
  • 1 tbsp Chili Powder
  • 1 tsp Paprika
  • 1 tsp Dried Oregano
  • 2 tbsp Bragg Liquid Aminos
  • .75 cups Water
  • 4 cups Vegetable Stock + 2 cups Water
  • 1 Head Garlic, rinsed
  • 1 Onion, rinsed
  • 1 tbsp Tomato Paste
  • 2 tbsp
  • .25 cups Grape Seed Oil
  • Salt and Pepper to taste

Instructions

  1. We’ll start by making the seitan dough. Combine all the dry ingredients in a large bowl (gluten, nutritional yeast, onion powder, garlic powder, cumin, chili, paprika, oregano), then combine the .75 cups of water and liquid aminos. Pour the water mixture into the gluten mixture and stir immediately, then kneed when stirring becomes difficult. You want to work this dough harder than you would with bread dough to encourage the protein to firm up for a meaty texture. When ingredients are fully incorporated and worked, set aside for at least 15 minutes.
  2. In the meantime, prepare the broth mixture to cook the seitan dough. Combine the 4 cups of vegetable broth and 2 cups of water in a stew pot over medium heat. Cut your garlic bulb in half and pull out several cloves, putting the rest of the bulb into the broth. Mince the cloves you retained. Remove the ends and outer layer of your onion and put those in the broth. Finely dice the onion and save for later. If you have the head of a jalapeno, that can also flavor the broth.
  3. When the broth boils, reduce heat to a simmer. Take your ball of seitan dough and cut chunks of approximately two inches and put them into the broth. Kitchen scissors are really helpful for this. Let them simmer for 45 minutes. They’ll increase significantly in size and float.
  4. Intermission. This is a great time to make some homemade salsa!
  5. Ok, the seitan is done. Remove the chunks with a slotted spoon and use another spoon to press out any excess liquids. Put the cooked seitan and tomato paste into a food processor and pulse until it has taco meat texture.
  6. Last step. In a large pan over medium heat, sauté the seitan, minced garlic, chopped onion and sesame seeds in the grape seed oil for 10-15 minutes. You can boost the flavor with additional seasonings if you want, plus the salt and pepper to taste. Stir occasionally, but do allow it to brown.

Now you have a flavorful taco meat that has great texture to use in burritos, on nachos, in taco salad, etc. Here’s the bonus: this recipe has no cholesterol and it’s lower in fat, calories and sodium than taco meat made from lean ground beef.

Vegetarian Chili

02 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

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Tags

beans, chile, chili, gluten-free, meatlessmonday, mild, recipes, spicy, vegetarian

Vegetarian Chili Ingredients

This is a nice mild recipe, great for a group with different spice preferences as heat-lovers can add Tabasco, etc. But if everybody that you’re serving likes it hot, double the jalapeno, kick up the chili powder and add some red pepper flakes!

Ingredients:

  • .25 cups Grape Seed Oil
  • 2 tbsp Cumin
  • 1 tbsp Chili Powder
  • 1 tsp Dried Oregano
  • 2 Bay Leaves
  • 1 tsp Kosher or Celtic Sea Salt
  • 1 tsp Fresh Ground Black Pepper
  • 1 Large or 2 Small Jalapenos, finely chopped with stem and seeds removed
  • 12 Cloves Garlic, chopped
  • 2 Large or 3 Small Onions, chopped
  • 2 cans Diced Tomatoes, with liquids
  • 1 can Corn, with liquid
  • 1 can Black Beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 can Pinto Beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 can Kidney Beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 can Garbanzo Beans, drained and rinsed
  • .5 cups Water

If you have a bell pepper of any color, dice it and add with the onions. If you don’t have all four kinds of beans, just double-down on what you’ve got. I’ve also seen people put diced celery in their chili, so that’s worth a try. Garnish with grated cheese and sour cream. Yum!

Maple Balsamic Vinaigrette

01 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

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gluten-free, maple, meatlessmonday, recipes, salad dressing, vegetarian

Maple Balsamic Vinaigrette Ingredients

This is one of my favorite salad dressings. It’s a little sweet, a little tangy, and has a little kick. Great on baby spinach with walnuts and feta or goat cheese. Add some marinated beets and you’ll want to host a dinner party just to impress some guests.

Ingredients:

  • .25 cups balsamic vinegar
  • .25 cups 100% pure maple syrup
  • .5 cups grape seed or light olive oil
  • .5 tsp fresh ground black pepper
  • .25 tsp crushed red pepper flakes

Mix/shake all together to emulsify. Better to make at least one hour ahead of time so that the peppers can flavor the liquids.

Homemade Vegetable Stock

28 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

gluten-free, homemade, meatlessmonday, recipes, vegan, vegetablebroth, vegetablestock, vegetarian

Homemade Vegetable Stock

I might use 2 to 3 quarts of vegetable stock per month, maybe more in the winter, which isn’t really a lot. But at almost $4 for a quart of the good stuff, that’s over $100 per year. Meanwhile, I’ve been throwing away all my fresh vegetable scraps. I finally realized, it doesn’t add up. Now that I know how to make my own delicious no-sodium vegetable stock, I’m feeling clever four times over: one for the money, two for the waste, three for the salt, and four for the taste!

Vegetable stock is less of a recipe per se and more about knowing the theory and then improvising for the occasion. There’s no consensus on the right way to make stock, every cook finds her own. Here’s what I’ve learned from reading tons of recipes and finally just doing it my way…

The Foundation: The one thing everyone does agree on is that a stock starts with three key aromatic vegetables: onion, celery, and carrot. In French cuisine, this holy trinity is called mirepoix (meer-PWAH) which loosely translates to “some French Duke who hired a really good chef.” You might see leeks instead of, or in addition to, onions. Same with parsnip and carrots. But some version of mirepoix will be the base every time.

Herbs: The two other elements that you’ll find across the board are peppercorns and bay leaves. Also very popular are garlic and parsley. The stems of fresh herbs are perfect for stock. So if you’re using the leaves off a bunch of parsley or cilantro, you’ll be able to use the other half that isn’t leafy here. If you have fresh thyme, rosemary, sage, oregano, or basil – toss some into the pot!

Fats: In about a quarter of the recipes I’ve seen, people use butter, olive oil, or both. I don’t use any fats because stock is always an ingredient in something else, and I’d rather measure the fats for the final recipe.

Salt: Just like with fats, I don’t add any sodium because the stock is not the final product. But lots of people do put salt and/or Tamari in their stock. If you do want to try, start with 2 tsp salt per quart of water and adjust to your liking.

Brightness: You’ll see this less frequently, but it’s something I usually do: add some white wine or lemon. It’s easier to overdo the lemon – half of an already squeezed one per 2 quarts is enough. Wine, on the other hand, adds richness as well as brightness – anywhere from a quarter to a full cup is great.

Everything Else: The woody part of asparagus, bok choy butts, broccoli and cauliflower stems, chard or beet greens, sweet potato peelings, fennel stocks, zucchini and summer squash, the top of one red bell pepper without the seeds – all great additions to increase the complexity and balance of flavor. But the two I would be loath to leave out are mushrooms and tomatoes, both for the umami they add, thereby rounding out the flavor experience and reducing the need to over-salt in the final dish.

Cooking Technique: Some folks oven roast the mirepoix and other hearty pieces first, drawing out and deepening flavors. If you do this you will need to use some type of fat. Other people toss everything into a pot of boiling water and walk away. My approach is in the middle: I do cook the onion, garlic, and herbs in white wine for 10 minutes before adding the other ingredients and enough water to just cover them, about 2 liters. However you choose to start, we’ll all end with simmering our ingredients for 45 to 60 minutes and then straining out our very own homemade stock!

Storage: Stock will keep in the refrigerator for up to 5 days or in the freezer for 3 months. A great idea is to freeze it in ice cube trays, then transfer into a freezer bag so you can easily thaw just the portion you need.

Watch-outs: Always use fresh ingredients, never anything that’s spoiled. Stock will not hide bad ingredients, it will amplify them. Rinse everything well and use organic if you can. Never let anything burn. If you’re making stock for a specific use, consider tailoring your mix of ingredients to complement that recipe (rosemary for Italian dishes, but not Mexican, etc.). On the flip side, consider avoiding flavors that are very distinctive if you’re making a batch for general/TBD use. I’d be careful with peppers – if the top of one mild red bell pepper makes its mark on the flavor profile, I can’t imagine what jalapeno scraps would do.

Sweet Potato Hummus

26 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

gluten-free, hummus, meatlessmonday, recipes, sweetpotato, vegan, vegetarian

Sweet Potato Hummus Ingredients

This recipe is based on one my friend Dena gave me months ago, which I finally got around to making. My loss, because it’s great! A nice flavor twist on traditional hummus, which I make all the time. And sweet potatoes add nutritional density that you don’t get from beans alone.

Ingredients:

  • 1 Large Sweet Potato, boiled until soft and then peeled
  • 1 Can Garbanzo Beans, drained and rinsed well
  • Juice from 1 Lemon
  • 3 Cloves Garlic
  • .25 cups Tahini
  • .25 cups Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 1 tbsp Brown Sugar
  • 1 tbsp Dried Sage
  • 1 tsp Smoked Paprika
  • 1 tsp Cumin
  • Salt & Pepper to Taste

Place all ingredients into a food processor or blender until smooth. Great on wraps, as spread or for dipping.

Curry Butternut Squash Soup

25 Sunday Mar 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

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curry, easter, gluten-free, meatlessmonday, recipes, soup, squash, thanksgiving, vegetarian

Curry Butternut Squash Soup

This has been a family favorite for years. It’s a beautiful soup course to accompany holiday meals, but also hearty enough to be a main course served with salad and bread any time of the year.

One large butternut squash will yield enough meat, or use a regular sized one and supplement with a small acorn squash. You can either peel the squash and put raw chunks in the pot, or cut it in half and roast it until you can more easily scoop out the meat and then reduce the time in the pot. Of course, this recipe becomes significantly easier if you purchase pre-chunked squash, but the tradeoff is no seeds for garnish.

No matter how you cut it (Ha! Ok sorry.), this is a really wonderful dish. You can easily substitute oil instead of butter for a vegan version – but if that’s not your thing the butter does add richness.

Curry Butternut Squash Soup Ingredients

Ingredients:

  • 4 cups Butternut Squash, peeled and seeded and cut into half-inch chunks – save the seeds
  • 2 cups Onion, diced
  • 2 cups Apple, peeled and cored and cut into half-inch chunks
  • 4 cups Vegetable Broth
  • 4 tbsp Butter
  • 1 tbsp Grape Seed Oil (for the seeds)
  • 4 tsp Curry Powder
  • 1 tsp Salt, plus more to taste
  • 1 tsp Fresh Ground Black Pepper, plus more to taste

Instructions:

  1. In a large stew pot, melt the butter over medium heat and stir in the curry powder, salt and pepper. Then add the onions and cook for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  2. In the meantime, rinse the squash seeds until clean, pat dry and toss them in grape seed oil plus a little salt and pepper. Roast them in the oven at 300° until golden brown.
  3. Add the squash, apples and broth to the curry and onions. Bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for 20 minutes or until the squash is tender through. Remove from heat.
  4. Use an immersion blender directly into the pot to blend all the ingredients until creamy. If you don’t have an immersion blender, you can also use a regular blender or food processor – it’s just messier and takes several batches.
  5. Allow to sit for 10 minutes. Serve soup garnished with toasted seeds.

Homemade Vegetarian Wontons

24 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

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Tags

meatlessmonday, recipes, vegetarian, wonton

Homemade Vegetarian Wontons

I’ve recently become involved in my local Wellesley alumnae club – such a great group of women, wish I had dialed in sooner. One of the regular events is a Supper Club, and this month it was at my friend Irene’s house (here’s her blog) where she taught us to make wontons.

Wontons aren’t hard to make once you master the technique that separates a wonton from a blob. But the process is time consuming, so it’s common for families or groups of friends to sit around and chat while stuffing and folding these little pockets of yum. So wontons are really an experience, not just a food.

You can stuff wontons with almost anything, although too much moisture in the filling can compromise the integrity of the wrapper. Irene advised purchasing square wonton wrappers rather than trying to make them yourself, so as far as I’m concerned store-bought is authentic.

Our vegetarian stuffing included:

  • Acorn Squash, roasted and finely diced
  • Shiitake and Button Mushrooms, finely diced
  • Nori Seaweed, cut into small pieces

How to fold wontons

Here’s the folding technique she taught us – which is one of many styles, but I think a particularly cute one:

  1. Lay the wrapper in the palm of your hand and wet two adjacent edges with water using the tip of your finger.
  2. Scoop a “cubic quarter” of filling into the center – a tablespoon or less. Don’t overstuff or your wrapper will break.
  3. Fold the two dry edges over to meet the two wet edges and press them to seal.
  4. Wet one of the new corners created by folding. Now this is the hard part: Take the two matching corners in each hand and draw them together, crossing one over the other and press them together so that the water can seal them. I think of it like the two corners are wrapping around to hug the belly of the wonton.
Homemade Wontons

Pro tip: Make extra wontons when you have helping hands to get the job done faster. Arrange on a tray and freeze. When frozen, transfer them from the tray to a freezer bag so they’re ready when you need a fast meal, as they cook very quickly.

Gently cook the wontons in a large pot of boiling water for about 3-5 minutes if fresh (between 5 and 10 minutes if frozen), testing as you go so as not to overcook. Scoop out with a large slotted spoon or mesh skimmer, discarding any that split open.

The wontons themselves are the centerpiece of an incredible meal. Irene had an impressive array of condiments and complements ready for us to customize our wonton bowls:

  • Soy Sauce
  • Rice and Red Wine Vinegars
  • Sriracha Hot Chili Sauce and Chili Garlic Sauce
  • Chopped Fresh Cilantro
  • Chopped Fresh Green Onions
  • Julienned Fresh Ginger
  • Strips of Fried Scrambled Egg
  • Sautéed White Onion
  • Steamed Baby Bok Choi
  • Steamed Napa Cabbage

I can’t wait to host my own wonton party. It was a delicious meal and delightful evening – and everybody went home absolutely stuffed, some of us holding our bellies like little wontons ourselves!

Broccoli Barley Risotto

16 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Recipes

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

barley, fiber, gluten-free, meatlessmonday, recipes, risotto, vegetarian

Broccoli Barley Risotto

One of my friends recently learned that she’s allergic to wheat and rice, along with a huge list of other ubiquitous ingredients like soybeans, milk, garlic, tomatoes and certain nuts. I looked through my recipes for things that could help her new allergy-free diet, but she needs to really customize recipes to eliminate all the different baddies on her list.

Then I remembered hearing that you can make risotto with pearl barley instead of Arborio rice. That could be a great building-block for her since risotto is wonderfully flexible, so I tried it out and was pretty happy with the results.

Barley releases less starch and takes longer to do it, so the final product gets maybe 80% of the way toward the classic risotto texture and you have to work a little harder for it. Still, with a significant difference in the amount of dietary fiber and the glycemic load, barley risotto is definitely making it into the rotation in my household.

Pearl Barley Arborio Rice
Total Carbohydrates

15%

18%

Dietary Fiber

24%

0%

Iron

12%

15%

Glycemic Load

19

30

[Nicole, if you’re reading this, I didn’t make my barley risotto totally safe for you because I did use garlic, butter and cheese. Omit the garlic and see if nutritional yeast plus additional oil will make it cheesy/creamy enough. Also, vegetable broth usually has tomato in it, but you can easily make your own without them. Good luck on your new program, I hope this helps!]

broccoli barley risotto ingredients

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup dry pearl barley
  • 4 cups vegetable broth
  • 1 diced onion
  • 6 minced cloves of garlic
  • 1 cup sliced mushrooms
  • 2 cups broccoli or broccolini florets (here’s something fun you can do with the stems!)
  • .25 cups pine nuts
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • .25 cups grape seed oil
  • .5 sticks butter (optional)
  • 4 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 2 bay leaves
  • .5 tsp Celtic salt
  • .5 tsp fresh cracked black pepper
  • Extra virgin olive oil to drizzle

Instructions:

  1. Warm the broth in a separate pot so it’s ready to ladle into the risotto
  2. In a large high-edged pan heat the oil over medium heat and season with the thyme, bay leaves, salt and pepper
  3. Add the onions and stir until they begin to turn translucent, then stir in the garlic, pine nuts and mushrooms
  4. Add the pearl barley and stir in so that it absorbs any oil and cooking juices
  5. Add wine and stir until absorbed
  6. Add broth one small ladle at a time until absorbed, stirring constantly
  7. Add the broccoli florets when you have the barley about half done absorbing liquids – wait a little longer if using broccolini as it’s more delicate
  8. Stir in parmesan cheese and butter
  9. Garnish with additional parmesan cheese, salt and pepper and a drizzle of olive oil
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