Showing posts with label vegan cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegan cooking. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2014

Summer Lunch






Simple vegetable lunch, 15-20 minutes to prep and cook:

Steamed (in the microwave) asparagus laid over a bed of salad (lettuce, cucumbers, cherry tomatoes, red pepper, cabbage shreds, and toasted pumpkin seeds tossed lightly in lemon juice and olive oil and some kosher salt)

Quick sauté in olive oil of corn cut off the cob, sliced mushrooms, sliced red peppers, salt and red pepper flakes.

Set up the sauté first, then as it cooks, prep the salad and steam the asparagus, while occasionally stirring the sauté. The corn dish is unbelievably tasty.

The remainder of the asparagus bunch was left out on a plate in the center of the kitchen butcher block and was completely scarfed up by 3 15-yr-old boys as a snack.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Baking at Home: Cowboy Cookies and Luscious Lemon Cake

Part of our home culture revolves around baking. This goes back to baking with my sisters growing up. It was a great way to procrastinate doing homework. We often felt we liked the batter better so once we made Toll House Cookies and decided not to bake them, just leave the bowl of batter in the fridge. We were never able to finish it and eventually threw it out—so now I understand that "tasting" the batter is completely legal and there will always be something left.

My oldest is a master baker. I mean that quite seriously. At 12 yrs. old he wanted to be a pastry chef and would concoct amazing confections for us: Dobisch Torte, Cinammon Buns, Apple Pie, Lemon Merinque Pie, German Chocolate Cake.

The other day he graced us with Vegan Cowboy Cookies, from Vegan Cookies Invade Your Cookie Jar: 100 Dairy-Free Recipes for Everyone's Favorite Treats


As usual he made them with incredible care
 and they came out perfectly! These cookies have completely supplanted Toll House Cookies in my heart, by the way - richer, denser, more texture and variety in the mouth feel. Cowboy Cookies are the Toll House's older, more sophisticated big brother.

For more pictures of Amnon's fabulous vegan cookie skills, check out the article on my vegan cooking blog: http://tofucrossing.com/2011/01/11/an-ode-to-vegan-cookies/



Lately Fat Rabbit is going through her coming-of-age baking explorations. She has been very interested in an old cookbook I have from my grandmother, the old Better Homes cookbook with the red plaid cover which still exists as Better Homes and Gardens New Cook Book 15th Edition: Gifts from the Kitchen (Better Homes and Gardens Plaid). This weekend she perused it for the perfect cake and chose the Luscious Lemon Cake recipe
And then she chose this frosting recipe.
The results were pretty delicious. But what I was most proud of was our own adaptation. The top layer stuck to the bottom of the pan (couldn't find second layer cake pan!) and so the icing got all tracked with crumbs—we decided to garnish with candied lemon circles to cover the damage, and working out of my head we figured out how to do this: Slice lemons, lay them in a pan, cover with water and sugar, and bring to a boil. We boiled the sugar water and lemons for about half an hour and then removed a set of delicious lemon circles.

As we worked on decorating the cake, and then on tasting it, we forgot about the lemonized sugar water in the pan. It was fun to discover it had turned into a delicious bitter lemon jam, with a lovely clear golden color, which we then ate on toast, and packaged the rest in an airtight container.


The final results: the cake and the lemon jelly





Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Roasted Brussel Sprouts



Roasted Brussel Sprouts

Image

Nothing could be simpler than roasting brussel sprouts.

1 lb brussel sprouts
1 Tbs olive oil
Kosher salt (sea salt, Himalayan salt—a coarse grinding salt.)

Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Prep brussel sprouts by trimming stem off and slicing in half. Lay them out single layer on a jelly roll pan. Sprinkle the olive oil on to the pan and shake and roll them around to coat them and the pan. Grind salt over the top.
Put in heated oven for 10 minutes. Open oven and grab pan (with pot holder!) and shake them around, or flip them with a spatula. Heat another 10 minutes.
Serve immediately. I often lay these out right as kids get home from school and are hungry for snacking and… they disappear.

For more vegan recipes, got to my vegan blog.