Monday, December 31, 2007

Swedish Tea Ring Update

As I mentioned in an earlier post, my mom made a Swedish Tea Ring for Christmas morning that was tender and light. While part of this is the mother's touch, I think the other part is the fact that she makes it the night before and lets it rest before baking it in the morning. This lets the gluten in the dough relax, makes the dough rise slowly, and gives the tea ring a better flavour. So, here is the deal: make the tea ring as I described, then cover and place in the fridge overnight. The next morning, uncover and place in a cold oven. Turn oven to 350 degrees and bake for 20-25 mins, or until golden brown.

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Ultimate Fajitas!

I know I already posted a fajita recipe, but these were too good not to mention! My in-laws put these together for last night's family Christmas get-together (Fajitas for Christmas dinner? Now that is out-of-the-box thinking!). They were beyond delicious. It was like there was a party in my mouth and everyone was invited! The secret to the good taste, I think, was twofold. One, the veggies were prepped the day before and left to marinate overnight. Second, the veggies were cooked in a BBQ wok (by yours truly).

INGREDIENTS
Quantity varies depending on how many fajitas you are making
- red, yellow, and green pepper, sliced
- sweet vidalia onion, sliced
- red onion, sliced
- portabella mushrooms, sliced
- olive oil
- chili powder
- balsamic vinegar

METHOD
1. Toss peppers and onions in olive oil. Sprinkle liberally with good quality chili powder and toss again. Let marinate overnight, if possible.
2. Toss mushroom slices with olive oil, 1 tsp or so of balsamic vinegar, and chili powder. Let marinate overnight, if possible.
3. Heat BBQ to med-hi heat. First cook peppers and onions in a BBQ wok (or some other metal container with holes), stirring frequently. Cook until veggies are soft and slightly browned. Do not overcook. Remove pepper and onion and keep warm. Cook mushroom slices for about 5 mins, until softened.

Serve these with whatever suits your fancy. We had guacamole, chopped green onion, chopped tomato, and pan-fried Yves "Chicken" Tenders.

Chocolate Thumbprint Cookies

Vegan Mother-in-Law made these from Vegan With A Vengeance for yesterday's family get-together. They were chewy and moist, and were delicate without crumbling or falling apart. I have never made them, but will have to whip up a batch when I get home.

Roasted Chestnuts

Really, I just wanted to share this photo with you (which I have compressed to accomodate for the dial-up connection). Roasted chestnuts are delightfully smoky, nutty, and sweet all at the same time. While I did not sing and yuletide carols whilst I ate these, they were good nonetheless.

METHOD
1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
2. Cut/poke an "X" through the shell of each chestnut with a paring knife. Place on a cookie sheet.
3. Roast for 20-22 mins. The shells will peel back around the X. When cool, peel, sprinkle with sea salt (optional) and enjoy!

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Looking Ahead and Bidding Adieu

I think Nupur had the brainwave of the year with her event, Best of 2007! Anyway, I think a lot of us would have done it but this way, we are all on board.

So here is my round up for the year. 2007 has been an awesome year professionally, very slow year personally but some nice things did happen, but the year has been best for blogging. I already had a personal journal and it took some thought before I started this one. Shaheen's blog was my inspiration and the first food blog I came across.

Here are some highlights from the year.



- The first post looks silly and so kiddish now. I laugh when I think back to the amount of time it took me to decide how I will write 'ingredients' and 'method'. I wanted a unique style and finally settled on 'What I Used' and 'How I Made It'.

- My proudest moment was when I baked my first loaf of bread. That's also the post with the most number of comments.

This recipe goes to Zorra's Best of 2007, Food Blogger's Collection.

- The most popular post has consistently been The 30-Minute Kerala Meal which was also an entry to Shaheen's Express Meals Event. I guess it shows that people are interested in Kerala meals but want it done fast.

- This is the post that surprised me the most because of the popularity and consistently holding second place in number of visits. The recipe is definitely simple enough and I posted it mostly because I was just in the mood.

- The most fun post because of the way I made it and the way it reminds me of my event-craziness! Also the second highest with respect to number of comments (Obviously, I love getting comments!!)

- The most special post. I cooked for my birthday. I would have never done it if the alluring thought of taking pics and blogging about the whole thing hadn't prodded me on.

- One of the major achievements is definitely hosting my own event and WBB #17. I really value the experience.

Then there are many many more things to say and I could go on. I am happy about the way in which my photography skills have grown from this to this. I learnt a lot from some remarkably skilled bloggers and the resources they pointed me to.

2008. Its going to be MY YEAR :D For many reasons. Expect some unique recipes, a lot of experimenting, better pictures and more event participation and hosting, if that's possible.

So here is me signing off for the year. Nupur, please take in this entry of mine :)

Have a wonderful new year, everyone!

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Darshini's Bread Upma

I am not an upma lover and haven't been ever since I can remember. But Darsh has made me a convert. With her simple yet elegant, yummy and spicy Bread Upma.

The behind the scenes story is that we spent Christmas eve at her place and woke up late the next day. There was nothing in the house to cook with except 2-day old bread and some tomatoes and chillies. With utmost confidence, she chopped, diced and sliced and made this yummy bowl of amazing brunch! So this recipe here is an ideal one for all those bachelors left at home with stale bread in hand and no time to cook a proper meal.

I was watching very closely for the ingredients used and the amounts of each but she is an intuitive cook - who does not measure! She was talking and cooking at the same time, hardly looking at the cooking pan! So here is what I could make out in between all the fun we had!



Serves : 4

What She Used:

Bread Slices, cubed - 15
Onions, chopped - 4 medium
Green chillies, chopped - 4
Ginger, chopped - a 2" piece
Tomatoes, cubed - 3 large
Hing - 1 tsp
Garam masala - 2 tsp
Pepper powder - 2 tsp
Coriander powder - 2 tsp
Mustard seeds - 2 tsp
Fresh coriander leavs - for garnishing
Salt - to taste

How She Made It:

1. Heat oil, cackle the mustard seeds, add onions, green chillies and ginger and fry till golden brown.

2. Add the hing, garam masala, pepper powder, coriander powder and fry well for 2-3 mins.

3. Add the tomatoes next and cook for another 3 mins. At this time, the gravy becomes loose and a little watery. Add salt to taste.

4. Next, add the cubed bread pieces and mix well. Cook for another 2 mins, garnish with coriander leaves and serve hot.

It was so yummy that I made it again for dinner the next day at home.




This is my dedication to a super cool and super fun friend who I've had tons of fun with wherever we've gone together. You rock babes!

Greetings from the Land of Dial-up

My parents are still on dial-up Internet service. I don't think of myself as an impatient man, but dial-up is enough to make you want to throw your monitor out the window waiting for that bleedin' progress bar to inch its way across the screen. That means I can't post any photos right now.

I made the Cranberry Glazed Tofu for the members of family who were at my parent's house on Christmas Day. It was a smashing success. My grandmother looked at it warily, and said something to the effect of "what the heck is this?,"but gobbled it right down and enjoyed it. I made crispy tofu this time (instead of baking it) to save time and oven space, and it opened up a discussion about how close the texture was to those chicken balls they serve at Chinese restaurants. I will chalk this recipe up in the "win" column.

On Boxing Day the whole family was here and I made the Holiday Stew for the vegans among us. We ran out of chick peas so I used cubed extra firm tofu that had been thawed and frozen. It worked really well. The meat-eaters had roast beef, which, quite frankly, was disgusting. The smell of cooking flesh and fat was bad enough, but the sight of sliced, bloody meat affected me more than I thought it would. The stew was really tasty, though.

My Mom has been catering to our needs all week, and we love her for it. She made a vegan Swedish Tea Ring for Christmas morning, which turned out way more tender and tasty than mine. Ah, the mother's touch . . . . She also made Chickpea Pot Pie with a mashed sweet potato topping instead of crust, which is a great low-fat option.

Thanks to all for the D.C. restaurant recommendations! I will bring my camera and blog from the road.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Mom's Delight - The Easiest and Yummiest Chocolate Dessert

Its been raining chocolate in the blogosphere for a while now. Not to mention all those delicious looking fruit cakes and yule logs.

The moment I read about Bindiya's 'These are a few of my Favourite Things - Chocolate' event and AFAM - Dry Fruits, I knew what I had to make. This is my favourite, my best and the yummiest of all desserts. Its so easy to make that I used to make it when I was in the 8th standard. And many times over after that too.



For some reason, we have always called it Mom's Delight at home. So here it is, presenting to you..

Mom's Delight

What I Used:

Powdered Marie Biscuits - 1 cup
Grated Coconut - 4 tbsp (optional)
Sweetened Condensed Milk - 1/2 cup
Bittersweet Chocolate Shavings - 1/2 cup
**or Cocoa Powder - 3 tbsp
Dried Chopped nuts - 1/2 cup
Butter - 2 tbsp





How I Made It:

1. Melt the butter and pour it into a pudding dish.

2. Layer the powdered marie biscuits and press lightly.

3. Sprinkle the coconut over it.

4. Pour the condensed milk gently on top of this.

5. Next layer is the chocolate. If you are using shavings, just lay it over the mixture. If using cocoa powder, mix it with a little condensed milk and pour.

6. Lay the chopped nuts on the top.

7. Bake for 10-12 mins. at 350 degree F/180 degree C.

8. Cool, cut and serve. Tastes delicious as is or even better with a scoop of vanilla ice-cream.




The pudding would be a little loose in consistency. I normally find it hard to cut it into perfect squares so just scoop it out and serve. It tastes awesome no matter what form you eat it in.

This goes over to Bindiya's event and AFAM - Dry Fruits

Sunday, December 23, 2007

The one that 'CLICK'ed



Jugalbandi is one of my favourite blogs. For a variety of reasons. So when they started their monthly food photography event and aptly named it 'Click', I was pretty excited. I was already a fan of their beautiful pics and tried to draw inspiration from them. Now we are going to have all those great pics in one place.

The first theme was 'eggs' and I clicked close to 50 pics of eggs on different days, in different ways. None of them satisfied me and I ended up not sending in any.

Then came 'noodles'. I went wild this time and had close to 100 pics by the end of the 20 days and still didn't find one I thought was good enough to send in. I was kicking myself for not thinking 'out of the box' and for not having those brilliant yet simple ideas that most in the blogosphere seemed to find came as second nature to them.

When the 'nuts' theme was introduced, I made a decision. It doesn't matter if my pic sucked. It doesn't matter if the lighting is not right, that I didn't have fancy crockery, that my camera is a $120 one or that I didn't even know what 'exposure time' meant. I still don't by the way.

The only thing that mattered was participation. Doing my two bits. And here it is this time. It took me over an hour to set up the black background, choose the bowls and select the prettiest of the nuts from the packet. I clicked 43 pics, chose this one, edited it the best I knew and off it went.


My entry to Click - Dec 2007 - Nuts

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Happy Holidays from Vegan Dad

Vegan Family and I are going to be hither and yon until the New Year, visiting family and friends, giving and receiving loot, and spreading vegan holiday cheer wherever we go. That means I won't be posting much, if anything, until the New Year since I will be serving up the holiday stew, cranberry glazed tofu, and cookies that I worked on this month. I will largely be serving it to myself since my parents, who have made made many dietary changes since I became vegan (like eliminating dairy), still feel the need to haul out large slabs of meat every time the family gets together. Kudos to my Mom, though, who will no longer eat meat when we come after Son #1 burst into tears at the sight of the Thanksgiving turkey and told everyone to "let the turkeys live!" From the mouth of babes . . . .

I will also be in D.C. for a conference, so if anyone has recommendations on where to eat I am all ears.

Happy holidays to you all!

Friday, December 21, 2007

Cinnamon Flavoured Tomato Rice/Thakkali Sadam/Thakkaali Choru

When Sunita announced her event Think Spice..Think Cinnamon for this month, I groaned inwardly cuz this is one spice I use only in Biriyani and other flavoured rice dishes. That too, with other spices. But the event kept prodding the back of my mind and soon I decided to read up a bit on the spice to see if it can be used in any other simple dish.

To my utter surprise and delight, I found so much material on this humble spice that I was quite astounded. Here are some quick facts on the benefits of Cinnamon.
  • Cinnamon has a long history both as a spice and as a medicine.
  • It has a lot of health benefits like anti-clotting abilities, anti-microbial qualities, ability to control blood sugar levels and its mere scent can boost brain activity.
  • Cinnamon has also been used to provide relief when faced with the onset of a cold or flu, especially when mixed in a tea with some fresh ginger.
source: whfoods.com

When I realised this, I decided to try one of my favourite flavoured rice dishes - Tomato Rice. But this time, I used only cinnamon to flavour it. It was so much easier and I felt so good thinking of all the health benefits of cinnamon. Yes, I am a fan now.

Also, when used as the only spice, the flavour comes out really well and there is a sweet aftertaste which complemented the tomato rice so well. This dish is also very apt and simple for bachelor cooking. You don't need any side dish since the rice itself is very flavourful.

Cinnamon Flavoured Tomato Rice


Serves 2

What I Used:

Tomatoes - 4 medium
Green chillies - 4
Onion - 1 small
Garlic - 6 cloves
Cinnamon stick - a 3" piece
Cinnamon powder - 1/2 tsp
Turmeric powder - 1/2 tsp
Jeera powder - 1/2 tsp
Mustard seeds and urad dal - for tempering
Oil - 1 tbsp
Salt - to taste

Cooked rice - 2 cups

How I Made It:

1. Heat oil and cackle mustard seeds and urad dal. Add chopped onions and slit green chillies. Fry till golden brown.

2. Now add the chopped garlic, turmeric, jeera, cinnamon powder and fry for 2-3 mins.

3. Next, add the chopped tomatoes and mash nicely while on fire. Adjust salt and let it cook for about 10 mins or so, until the tomatoes are cooked soft and take a sauce-like consistency. 

4. Turn off fire, add the cooked rice and mix well.


Garnish with mint leaves/coriander leaves and serve warm with cold raita and papad.

Pierogies

My grandparents were born in Pennsylvania's steel belt to Czechoslovakian immigrant parents. Childhood visits to see them were always filled with cabbage rolls and pierogies laden with fried bacon and sour cream. My grandmother showed her love with plates and plates of food, and we were only too happy to oblige. Needless to say, I have not had any pierogies since going vegan over 2 years ago. I noticed these frozen pierogies in the grocery store this week and was surprised to see they had no egg in the dough or cheese in the filling. I sauteed up some red and yellow onions in margarine and put them atop the pierogies. They are not even close to my grandma's, but it was fun to have something different for dinner. I am going to try to make a vegan pierogie next month, and dabble in cabbage rolls as well. Stay tuned!

Thursday, December 20, 2007

TuNori Sandwiches

If your house is as crazy as mine has been this past week you are looking for quick and easy meals. Our solution tonight: vegetable soup and sandwiches. It was a pretty easy decision since we still had the tasty bread I made last night. The question was: what to put on that bread to make sandwiches. I don't really miss tuna salad, but if you do then this is the recipe for you. I can't remember where I got this from--I think is was on a Vegan Lunch Box discussion forum about canned TuNo. It's a great way to enjoy nori and all its goodness without having to make sushi.

INGREDIENTS
- 1 can of chickpeas, rinsed and well drained
- 1/2 cup of vegenaise (or more, depending on what consistency you are going for)
- 1 sheet of toasted nori seaweed
- 1 tsp kelp granules (optional)
- salt and pepper to taste

METHOD
1. Rip nori into smaller pieces and place in a food processor. Process until finely chopped.
2. Add in chickpeas and pulse until coarsely chopped (be sure to pulse--otherwise it will become a paste.
3. Place chickpeas in a bowl. Add in vegenaise, kelp, and season to taste with salt and pepper. Keep cold until ready to serve.

Chicken Noodle Broth

I spent 10 mins trying out different names for this post. Chicken soup, Chicken noodle soup, Chicken soup for the soul (yeah, I know!), Noodle chicken broth, etc etc. Finally settled on Chicken Noodle Broth.

If you check recipes of chicken noodle broth online, you will invariably find chicken pieces added to it or atleast shredded ones. What I have here is just plain chicken broth with noodles in it, spiced up with some pepper and salt.

Wikipedia says that Chicken broth is the liquid part of chicken soup. Broth can be served as is, or used as stock, or served as soup with noodles. Broth can be milder than stock, does not need to be boiled as long, and can be made with meatier chicken parts.

Its great to have when you have a cold or a bad throat. As the weather is cold these days, its great to have a hot cup of chicken broth to curl your fingers around and watch some TV.

Chicken Noodle Broth



What I Used:

Maggi Chicken Stock Packets - 2 (150 gm)
Noodles - 100gm
Water - 4 cups
Pepper powder - 3 tbsp
Coriander powder - 1 tsp (optional)
Cornflour - 1 tsp (if you want thicker consistency)
Salt - to taste

How I Made It:

1. Boil the noodles in little water, until cooked.

2. Add the water, bring to boil and then add the chicken stock powder. Mix well before it forms lumps. Add the coriander powder and cornflour also, at this stage.

3. When the raw smell of the stock powder leaves the broth, mix in the pepper, adjust salt (stock powder has added salt, so be careful!) and remove from fire.



Serve hot with bread sticks.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Country-Style (Raisin) Bread

I asked Son #1 what he wanted for his birthday dinner, fully expecting that we would be throwing back veggie dogs and french fries tonight. When he said he wanted Cauliflower and Roasted Garlic Soup I could not believe my ears. He really is growing up! I also made this bread to go with the soup. It is a soft, fluffy, country-style bread (as opposed to a chewy, crusty, cafe-style bread). I made one loaf plain, and made the other into a cinnamon raisin bread.

INGREDIENTS
- 1/3 cup warm water
- 2 tsp active dry yeast
- 3/4 tsp sugar
- 2 cups warm water
- 1/3 cup sugar
- scant 3/4 tsp salt
- 2 tsp apple cider vinegar
- 1 tbsp ground flax seed, whisked into 3 tbsp of water
- 1/3 cup vegetable oil
- 6-7 cup white bread flour

METHOD
1. Stir 3/4 tsp of sugar into 1/3 cup of water. Mix in yeast and set aside until foamy.
2. Mix together 2 cups water, sugar, salt, vinegar, flax mixture, and oil in a large bowl. Mix in yeast mixture and 2 cups of flour (I do this with the batter attachment of a Kitchen Aid counter top mixer). Beat until smooth.
3. Add in 2 more cups of flour and mix until smooth. Add in enough of the remaining flour to make a soft dough (either by hand or with the dough hook attachment). Knead until smooth.
4. Place dough in a well-greased (i.e. margarined) bowl, turning to grease all sides. Cover with a towel and let rise for at least an hour, until doubled in size. If making a raisin bread loaf, divide dough in 2 equal pieces after kneading. Knead 1 cup of raisins into one of the dough balls. Let rise like the other dough ball.
5. Punch down risen dough and knead for a minute or so to get out the air bubbles. Roll out into a rectangle (width depends on the size of your loaf pan). Roll up tightly along the shorter end, seal seam and sides, and place in loaf pan. Let rise for 45 minutes, uncovered. If making raisin bread, roll out dough and sprinkle with 1/3 cup of brown sugar mixed with 1 tsp of cinnamon. Roll tightly and seal seam and sides. Let rise, uncovered, for 45 mins.
6. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place loaves in oven and bake for 35-40 minutes, until loaves are nicely browned and sound hollow when you knock on the bottom.
7. Let cool on racks, but make sure you eat a slice while still warm.

Candy Cane Cupcakes

Today is Son #1's 7th birthday. Hard to believe, but true. He wanted to bring in cupcakes for his class (increasing his popularity exponentially), and wanted them to be Christmas cupcakes. I had some mints leftover from the gingerbread house, as well as a few candy canes. I know I saw this idea on some other blog, but I can't remember which one. I ground up 2 large candy canes in my coffee grinder (about 1 cup), folded it into the buttercream frosting from Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World, spread it over the basic chocolate cupcakes, and topped with a mint. I think these would be great for holiday parties.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Coconut Curry Chickpeas

I love the creaminess of coconut milk and thought I would pair it with tomato and warm spices like cinnamon. The result was rather tasty. If my Mom had made Indian food when I was a kid, this might qualify as comfort food.

On a separate note: the boys all had a pediatric checkup and they are doing great! We have a new doctor since moving back to Canada, so I was afraid we were going to get some anti-vegan "where will they get their protein you crazy hippies?" speech. But, the boys are healthy and hearty and full of energy.

INGREDIENTS
- 2 tsbp oil
- 1 onion, diced
- 2 cloves of garlic, minced
- 1" piece of ginger, minced
- 1 can of chickpeas, drained and rinsed
- 1 tsp cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp cloves
- 1/4 tsp allspice
- 1/2 tsp garam masala
- 1 tsp salt
- 2 heaping tbsp tomato paste
- 1 can coconut milk
- 1/4 cup chopped cilantro

METHOD:
1. Heat oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Saute onion and ginger for 12-15 mins, until onion is a deep golden brown. Add garlic and saute for 1 minute.
2. Add chickpeas and spices and fry for 2 mins. Add tomato paste and coconut milk and bring to simmering. Adjust spices to your liking. Garnish with cilantro and serve over rice.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Tandoori Rotis

We have not had Indian food in a while, and nothing warms you up like a spicy curry. If you have been reading this blog for the past few months you know that I always make dhal. I also made curried chickpeas, which I will post tomorrow. Tonight's experiment was tandoori rotis. This may surprise you, but I don't have a tandoor oven. Neither do any of my friends. So, I thought I would try to mimic a clay oven by using the BBQ and a baking stone. So, out came the shovel and I tunnelled my way out to the BBQ--my neighbours must think I am nuts.

INGREDIENTS
Makes 8 rotis
- 3 cups whole wheat flour
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 - 1 1/4 cups water
- melted butter

METHOD
1. Sift flour and salt into a large bowl. Add in enough water to make a soft dough. Knead in a countertop mixer, or on a lightly floured surface for about 3 mins until smooth. Place in a lightly oiled bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and let rest for an hour (helps the gluten relax).
2. Place a baking stone on top of 4 soup cans on top of the BBQ grill. Light BBQ and let heat on med-hi heat. You want the temp to be about 600 degrees.
3. Divide dough into 8 pieces. Shape into a ball and press down by hand into a circle. Let rest, under plastic wrap, for 10 mins.
4. Roll out each dough ball into a 6 inch circle. Sprinkle a little cornmeal on the baking stone. Place 4 rotis on the stone and close the lid. Bake for 5-7 mins, until rotis are puffed up and lightly browned. Repeat until all rotis are baked. Brush with melted margarine and serve.
5. Alternately, bake in an oven on cookie sheets for 8-10 mins at 450 degrees.

Hot Chocolate

I will probably say this a lot over the next few months: it's cold outside! Yesterday we achieved booger-freezing cold--that special temperature where one sniff and your nose is frozen shut. There is no better way to warm up after shovelling the driveway than this creamy hot chocolate.

Makes 2 big honkin' cups, like those pictured here

INGREDIENTS
- 4 cups chocolate soy milk
- 1/2 cup vegan chocolate chips
- 2 tsp vanilla
- sugar to taste
- pinch of salt

METHOD
1. Combine all ingredients in a pot an whisk over high heat until steamy and frothy.

Arusuvai Friendship Chain - Triple Chocolate Fudge Brownies

The Arusuvai Friendship Chain has been inspired by the Amish Friendship Bread Starter chain doing the rounds outside of India. More details about the chain, here. It has been quite active and as part of it, I received a surprise ingredient from Lakshmi of Yum Blog. It was none other than my favourite - Chocolate!!!

It was a 500gm bar of Morde Dark Chocolate. I received her packet in office and throughout the day, me and my cube mate were treated to the lovely smell eminating from the box.

There are so many things I could have made with this amazing ingredient and I started the search. Zeroed in on an easy, yet popular dish, Chocolate Brownies. Recipes adapted from Jugalbandi and Lakshmi's basic brownie recipe which she sent me via email.

Triple Chocolate Fudge Brownies


Makes 10 medium sized brownies

What I Used:

Bittersweet chocolate - 125gm
Butter - 6 tbsp
Sugar - 5 tbsp
Maida - 1/2 cup
Cocoa powder - 2 tsp
Instant coffee powder - 1 tsp
Almonds - 20 nos
Eggs - 2
Vanilla - 1 tsp
Salt - one pinch

How I Made It:

1. Melt chopped chocolate pieces and butter in a pan placed in another bigger one with simmering water. Once melted, keep aside until warm.

2. Powder sugar and add to the above mixture, along with vanilla.

3. Add the eggs one by one and stir well.

4. Then add the maida, salt, cocoa and coffee powder and mix till everything has blended in well.

5. I laid the top of this mixture with chopped almonds that were blanched first. To blanch almonds, pour boiling water over them, keep covered for 3-4 mins. Then plunge them in cold water, leave for 2 mins. Slide the the skin off and use.

6. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 350 degree centigrade for around 20 mins. The colour wasn't as deep as it was in Jai's and Bee's post. Any thoughts why?


Serve warm with a scoop of vanilla ice-cream :)

My secret ingredient has been couriered to the next recipient, Bhags of Crazy Curry. So keep a watch on her blog for more ;)

This is my entry to this month's JFI - Chocolate hosted by Deepz of LetzCook.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Breakfast Burritos with Homemade Tortillas

I was perusing the What do Vegans Eat blog and saw this post for breakfast tacos. It instilled a deep desire to make my own tortillas and fill them with a host of good things. First, I made scrambled tofu, and added in a half cup of salsa at the end. Then, I made fried potatoes and spiced them Mexican-style (microwave 6-8 small potatoes for about 5 mins, until softish. Cut into small cubes and fry in 2 tbsp of oil over med-hi heat for 10 mins, stirring often. Season with 1/2 tsp each cinnamon, chili power, salt.) Put tofu, potatoes, diced tomatoes, avocado slices, lettuce, tofu sour cream, and salsa (or whatever else suits your fancy) in tortilla, roll, and eat.

What really makes the meal awesome is the home-made tortillas. This recipe makes 5 large, 0r about 10 small, tortillas.

INGREDIENTS
- 10 oz all purpose flour
- 1 tsp salt
- 2 oz vegetable shortening
- 5-6 fluid oz warm water (about 2/3 cup)

METHOD
1. Mix flour and salt together in a large bowl. Rub in shortening with your fingers until mixture look like bread crumbs. Add in enough water to make a soft dough.
2. Knead dough on a lightly floured surface for 2-3 mins, until smooth. Wrap in plastic wrap and let sit for at least 15 mins.
3. Heat a cast iron pan on med to med-hi heat. Pinch off a piece of dough, and roll as thin as possible on a floured surface. Plan on pan and cook for 20-30 seconds on each side. The trick is to adjust the heat so the tortillas get a nice speckled brown look, but do not burn. Do not overcook.
4. After each tortilla is cooked, place in a stack wrapped in a kitchen towel. Keep the tortillas wrapped up until ready to use, otherwise they will harden.

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Vegan Gingerbread House

Many, many hours later the vegan gingerbread house is done! I learned a lot about gingerbread, house building, and icing. I am not sure I am cut out for gingerbread house making--I am an anal retentive perfectionist when it comes to food and gingerbread houses are messy and sticky with goopy icing and nary a straight line anywhere. But, the kids thought it was the best gingerbread house ever, and they had fun "helping," so that is all that matters.

VEGAN GINGERBREAD
The gingerbread recipe comes from the Vegan Lunchbox blog. It is awesome--durable, pliable, and reliable.
- 1/3 cup non-hydrogenated margarine, at room temperature
- 1 cup packed brown sugar
- 1 cup sweet unsulphured molasses
- ¾ cup water
- 6 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 tsp. baking soda
- ¾ tsp. kosher salt
- 1 tsp. cinnamon
- 1 tsp. ground ginger
- ½ tsp. cloves
- ½ tsp. allspice
METHOD:
1. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, or in a large mixing bowl with a hand mixer, cream together the margarine, brown sugar, molasses, and ½ cup of water.
2. In another bowl, sift together the flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and allspice. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, adding just enough of the water to incorporate all the flour and form a dough that holds together well.
3. Turn the dough out of the bowl and form into four equal balls. Wrap each ball well with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least one hour.
4. Preheat the oven to 350º. Line some baking sheets with parchment and spray with nonstick spray. Set aside.
5. Working with one ball at a time, roll the dough out on a lightly floured surface with a lightly floured rolling pin. Roll the dough about ¼-inch thick and cut into desired shapes.
6. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, until the surface is firm. Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
Some sagely advice: make the supporting walls thickish, but make the roof pieces thinner. Any tricky pieces, like dormers, should be cracker thin.

VEGAN ROYAL ICING
The icing comes from http://www.goodbaker.com/.
- 1 lb. confectioners' sugar
- 1/4 cup powdered soy milk
- 6 tbsp soy milk
- 6 tbsp light corn syrup

METHOD:
In a mixing bowl, mix the sugar and soy milk powder, then add most, but not all, of the soy milk. Add corn syrup just until combined. Add remaining soy milk if the icing consistency is not smooth enough, but be careful not to add so much that it will be too runny or fail to harden.

SOME TIPS:
1. Go small. Don't try to be a hero and try to make a scale version of your own house.
2. Make sure the afternoon is free. This is going to take a while.
3. Make the icing is as thick as possible. You really can't replace egg whites in royal icing, as it turns out, and gravity is not your friend.
4. Thin is good for gingerbread. Things can get unruly if the pieces are too thick.
5. Be patient. Let base pieces set and dry before you start building up.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Gingerbread House Update

Well, I have almost done everything thing I said I would do on the blog this month to prep for Christmas. The chestnut stew was tasty, as were the vegan cookies, and the cranberry glazed tofu made me enjoy cranberries more than I ever have before. So, that only leaves the gingerbread house--the plan is to make a model of our house. I completed my cardboard model, which I posted here, have found the perfect gingerbread recipe and a vegan royal icing recipe. Son #2 and I hit the bulk food store yesterday and loaded up on vegan candy. Tomorrow is construction day. If all goes well, I will have pics for tomorrow's entry.

Snobby Joes: Veganomicon Rocks the Lentil

Today was a busy day with Vegan Mom volunteering at the school's Christmas bazaar and me looking after the kids and then taking them to said bazaar (for which we baked chocolate cupcakes). So, tonight we cracked open Veganomicon again and joined forces to make these Snobby Joes. We all loved them, and it is a great way to get the kids to unknowingly chug back lentils. I like a Sloppy Joe with a bit more bite than this recipe provides, so I squirted in a few tbsp of ketchup and a tbsp of red wine vinegar. If I had some I would have added a dash of Tabasco sauce.

The recipe is posted on the PPK site.

Low Fat Christmas Sugar Cookies

The Christmas spirit is really beginning to settle in with carol practices and white gifts and fruit cakes and cookies all around. I have a list of events happening in the food blogosphere this month and the one thing that has been upmost in my mind is Susan of Food Blogga's event, 'Eat Christmas Cookies'. I mean, when else do you eat them.

I haven't baked much cookies in my life. The one recipe that clearly comes to my mind is the butter cookies I used to make often when I was in college. It called for copious amounts of butter so I was on the lookout for a low fat Xmas cookie recipe. Found a simple one here and tried it out. Came out nice and crunchy and yummy. I halved the ingredients amount.

Low Fat Christmas Sugar Cookies



Makes 15 medium-sized cookies

What I Used:

Softened butter - 2.5 tbsp
Sugar - 5 tbsp (Add more if you like sweet cookies, after all they are called sugar cookies!)
Egg - 1
Flour - 1 cup
Baking powder - 1/2 tsp
Vanilla essence - 1/2 tsp
Salt - one pinch

How I Made It:

1. Sift flour, salt and baking powder till all three have mixed properly.

2. Cream butter and sugar.

3. Slowly add the lightly beaten egg and the flour mix to this to make a dough that will be slightly crumbly.

4. Wrap in a plastic sheet and refrigerate for 2 hours.

5. Once cool, roll out the dough and cut into desired shapes. I dont have any cookie cutters so I made smal balls and flattened them out with my hand. I also sprinkled some sugar on top before baking.

6. Preheat oven and bake the cookies at 350 degree F/180 degree C. They were done in 8-10 mins, so stick around!





This goes to Susan's 'Eat Christmas Cookies' Event. Have fun baking for Christmas, everyone. Meanwhile let me get cracking on the other events out there :)

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Rigatoni with Roasted Garlic White Sauce

Vegan Mom and I used to make a cream-based white sauce and served it over tortellini. It used to be a standard, actually. For some reason I was thinking it about it today, and decided to create something like it for tonight's dinner. We didn't have any tortellini (I'm pretty sure tortellini dough has egg in it anyway), so I went with what we did have: rigatoni. The sauce turned out rather well--smooth, creamy, and full of that smoky roasted garlic flavour.

INGREDIENTS:
- 1 head of garlic
- 1/4 cup margarine
- 1 small yellow onion, diced
- 1 red onion, diced
- 1 green pepper, seeded and diced
- 4 generous tbsp flour
- 1 pkg firm silken tofu, dabbed dry
- 4 cups plain soy milk
- 3/4 cup nutritional yeast
- 1/4 tsp nutmeg
- freshly ground white pepper, to taste
- salt, to taste

METHOD
1. Separate cloves of garlic from the head, but do not peel. Dry roast in a small pan over medium heat for about 10-12 mins, turning regularly to keep from burning, until soft. Cool and peel.
2. While garlic is roasting, melt margarine in a large saucepan over medium heat. Saute onions for 5 mins. Add green pepper and saute for 10 mins.
3. Place garlic gloves, tofu, and soy milk in a juice pitcher. Blend until very smooth with an immersion blender.
4. Add flour to onions and peppers, and mix well. Slowly pour in tofu mixture, stirring constantly. Bring to bubbling.
5. Stir in nutritional yeast, add nutmeg, and season to taste with salt and pepper.
6. Serve over hot cooked rigatoni.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Brooklyn vs. Boston Creme Cupcakes

Tonight the boys and I made cupcakes. (Mom, if you are reading this, we are holiday baking/class party mode. We usually don't make this many desserts) I have wanted to make these cupcakes since I got Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World but have never been able to find the agar powder the recipe calls for. And the chances of finding it here in northern Ontario are pretty much nil. So, I improvised. I substituted 1 tbsp of cornstarch for the agar (and still kept the arrowroot powder), and used firm tofu. I blended everything in a saucepan with an immersion blender, then whisked it over medium heat until it thickened. Once cooled, I piped it into the cupcakes as directed. I am not sure what the real version is supposed to be like, but this was pretty tasty.

Mexican Roasted Veggies

Tonight was leftover chimichangas from last night. I thought I would try to spice it up by creating a new side dish. The result was pretty tasty. Nothing special, but tasty.

INGREDIENTS
- 1 yellow onion, cut in quarters
- 1 red onion, cut in quarters
- 3 tomatoes, cut in quarters
- 3 potatoes, diced
- 1 cup frozen corn
- 1/2 tsp each cumin, chili powder, oregano, cinnamon, salt
- oil

METHOD
Preheat oven to 400 degrees
1. Place veggies in a bowl, toss with oil and spices. Place in an 8 1/2 x 11 stoneware baking dish.
2. Roast veggies for about 45 mins, turning every 15 mins, until veggies are golden and tomato is reduced to a paste.

Weekend Breakfast Blogging - Cornflakes Roundup

Weekend Breakfast Blogging is the brainchild of Nandita of Saffron Trail and it was my turn to host the event for November 2007. WBB #17 saw some exciting and unique recipes with the ingredient cornflakes - the mother of all breakfasts.

Without further ado, let me take you through the wonderful array of delicious recipes that are sure to give you a 'kick' for the rest of the day.



Pushpa's Cornflakes Bread Pudding

Lissie's Pineapple Cornflakes Pudding

Renuka's Cornflakes Milkshake

Sagari's Crispy French Toast

Raaga's Miracle Bars

Mocha's Strawberry Banana Dates Parfait

Dhivya's Cheesy Baked Potatos With Cornflakes

RP's Date Bars

Asha's Orange Cornflakes Muffins

Rajitha's Creamy Lasagna

Bharathy's Cornflakes Cookies

Hima's Crispy Pancakes

Bee's Indian Corn

Mansi's Nut Spiced Cereal Bars

Aparna & Akshaya's Cornflakes Cookies

Do try out these yummy breakfast ideas and let us know what you thought.

Remember: Breakfast is the most important meal of the day. It gets us started and keeps us going for the rest of the day. One out of every four of us skip breakfast, according to recent studies. That's a lot of people! To avoid this in futire, lets ensure our kids don't learn from our bad habits.


Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Russian Tea Balls

This recipe started out as "Christmas Cookies with Walnuts," a recipe I found in my Mexican cookbook. I thought they would be a nice way to finish off our chimichanga dinner (see the other post for today). The recipe called for lard, which I thought could be easily replaced with vegetable shortening. I also replaced the walnuts with pecans (Vegan Mom is not a big walnut fan). The picture in the cookbook showed fairly flat cookies, but mine stayed as balls (maybe the lack of lard?). In fact, the end result tasted just like a cookie my Mom makes for Christmas called Russian Tea Balls. So, by my mistake I veganized yet another childhood favourite.

INGREDIENTS
- 1/2 cup vegetable shortening
- 1/4 cup icing sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 1/4 cup all purpose flour
- 3/4 cup finely chopped pecans (I pulsed whole pecans in a coffee grinder)
- icing sugar for dusting

METHOD
Preheat oven to 350
1. Beat shortening in a bowl until fluffy. Slowly beat in icing sugar, then vanilla, and beat well.
2. Add in flour by hand, gently working it in until mixture resembles rough bread crumbs. Gently mix in pecans by hand.
3. Form/press mixture into 24 balls by hand (about the size of ping pong balls). Bake 12-15 mins, until very lightly golden. Cool on baking racks.
4. When cooled, roll cookies in icing sugar to coat. Enjoy!

Baked Chimichangas

Let's face it, chimichangas taste best when they are deep fried. But, let's also face it, deep frying is not a healthy choice. Quite frankly, I was starting to feel guilty about the number of times I made crispy tofu in the past month or so, and with many readers praising the "healthy meals" I was making for my family guilt was turning to paranoia. Surely some Skinny Bitch fan was going to call me out on the carpet . . . . Anyway, baking the chimis really works well--they are still crispy and don't make your house smell like the school cafeteria.

INGREDIENTS
Feel free to stuff these with whatever you want. This is what I did.
- 1 tbsp oil
- 1 onion, diced
- 1 tsp ground anise
- 1 tsp oregano
- 2 tsp chili powder
- 1 tsp cumin
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon
- 1 cup TVP
- 1 1/2 cup water
- 10 large wheat tortillas
- 1 can refried beans
- salsa
- oil for brushing

METHOD
Preheat oven to 450 degrees
1. Heat oil in frying pan and saute onion over medium heat until golden brown. Add spices and TVP and mix well. Add water and cook for 5 mins. Set aside to cool.
2. Slather a thick line of refried beans in the middle of the tortilla. Top with 1/10 of the TVP mixture and a generous tbsp of salsa. Fold tortillas chimichanga style (i.e. close both ends). Brush with canola oil and place on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper (or a non-stick sheet).
3. Bake for 20-25 mins. Serve with tofu sour cream, chopped tomatoes, lettuce, and salsa.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Tofu with Sweet Cranberry Glaze, with Stuffing and Glazed Potatoes and Gravy

Tonight's goal was to create a Christmas-style meal in 1 hour. Mission accomplished! I am not the biggest fan of cranberries, but this glaze was perfect and worked well with the other flavours of the meal. I broiled the tofu on a stoneware baking sheet (this way you don't have to use oil-- well-seasoned stoneware is non-stick). I have texture issues and like a firm and chewy tofu. If you don't have texture issues you can skip this step and save some time.

Tofu with Sweet Cranberry Glaze
INGREDIENTS
- 1 pkg firm tofu, cut into 8 triangles
- 2 1/2 cup fresh cranberries
- 1 cup water
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon
- pinch of allspice

METHOD:
Preheat broiler
1. Slice tofu and dab with a paper towel to absorb excess moisture. Place on a stoneware baking sheet and broil about 5 mins per side, until golden brown. Be careful not to burn.
2. Meanwhile, make the glaze. Place cranberries and water in a saucepan. Bring to boil, cover, and cook for about 15 mins, until cranberries are soft, Blend with a hand blender until smooth. remove from heat and stir in sugar and spices.
3. Turn oven to 350 degrees. Line baking sheet with parchment paper. Place tofu on sheet, leaving ample room between. Spoon cranberry glaze over tofu, making sure to coat the sides. Bake for 15 mins. Turn over, coat again, and bake 15 more mins. Turn over, coat one last time, and bake 15 more mins.

Not all the glaze will be used. I boiled Yukon Gold fingerling potatoes, and tossed them with the remainder of the glaze.

Stuffing
INGREDIENTS
- 1/4 cup margarine
- 1 onion, diced
- 1 rib of celery, diced
- 8 slices of thick sliced whole wheat bread, cubed (I used Wonder Texas toast)
- 2 tsp sage
- 1 tsp thyme
- 1/2 tsp salt

METHOD
1. Melt margarine in a saucepan over medium heat. Saute onions and celery until soft. Add spices. Pour over bread cubes and toss well.
2. Press bread into a stoneware loaf pan, cover with foil, and bake for 45 mins (i.e. while tofu is baking).
Easy Gravy
INGREDIENTS
- 2 tbsp oil
- generous tbsp flour
- 2 cups plain soy milk
- 2 tsp sage
- salt and pepper to taste
METHOD
1. Heat oil in small saucepan over medium heat. Whisk in flour. Whisk in soy milk and bring to bubbling. Stir in sage and salt and pepper.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Mochakottai Sundal/Butter Beans Tempered With Grated Coconut

Mochakottai is one of my dad's favourite additions to any gravy or 'pulusu' that we make at home. I was home on vacation last week and mom had made 'mochakottai kozhambu' with it. There was some left over, so the next day evening, our maid, Mary made this simple, yet extremely popular, tamil preparation with the beans. Was a nice evening snack with some hot tea.

Mochakottai Sundal




You Will Need:

Mochakottai/Butter Beans - 100gm
Grated coconut - 1/2 cup
Red chillies - 5
Urad dal - 1 tsp
Mustard - 1/2 tsp
Curry leaves - 1 strand
Oil - 1.5 tbsp
Salt - to taste

How Its Made:

1. Pressure cook the beans till its soft.

2. Heat oil, add mustard seeds and let them cackle. Add the urad dal, red chillies and curry leaves and fry for a min.

3. Add the cooked butter beans, coconut and required salt. Stir well and cook for another 2 mins.

Serve warm with a hot cup of tea/coffee.



Sundal is also prepared as a festive dish in tamil festivals and is more commonly prepared with chickpeas.

Chewy Noels

Here is another veganized favourite from my childhood. I debated about how to replace the eggs in this one. Tofu did not seem like a good candidate since it would not provide enough moisture. Bananas are generally good for baking, but only if you like the taste of bananas, and I don't equate bananas with Christmas. Ground flax was really the only option left (I don't have egg replacer, but find it kind of chalky anyway). I was worried that the taste from the flax seeds would be too strong, but figured the walnuts and sugar would win in the end. I was right. The end result was a little more dense than the non-vegan version, but still really tasty and delightfully chewy.

INGREDIENTS
- 2 tbsp non-hydrogenated margarine
- 2 tbsp ground golden flax seed
- 6 tbsp water
- 1/3 cup flour, sifted
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/4 tsp baking powder
- 1/8 tsp salt
- 1 cup brown sugar
- 1 cup chopped walnuts
- 1 tsp vanilla
- icing sugar

METHOD
Preheat oven to 350 degrees
1. Melt margarine on low heat in a square baking pan (8x8) on the stove top.
2. Whisk flax seed into water in a small bowl. Set aside.
3. In a large bowl, mix flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, sugar and nuts. Stir in
vanilla and flax mixture. Be patient and let the moisture work its way through the dry stuff.
4. Spoon batter into the pan, carefully spreading to the sides, but being careful not to mix into the melted margarine.
5. Bake for 22-25 mins, until top is deep golden brown. The batter will be bubbling and gooey. Let completely cool--everything will solidify. Cut into small squares, and remove from pan, placing on serving tray bottom side up. Dust with icing sugar and serve.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Swedish Tea Ring

I have no idea if this particular tea ring actually has any affiliation with Sweden, but it sure is tasty. This is a recipe my Mom always made for very special occasions like Christmas morning, so it brings back a lot of warm and fuzzy memories. I have never actually eaten it with tea . . . . You will certainly be a vegan baking hero if you make this for your family, and it is sure to impress your friends at all the Christmas parties this holiday season.
INGREDIENTS
- 3 1/2 to 4 cups sifted flour
- 2 1/4 tsp active dry yeast
- 1 cup plain soy milk
- 1/4 cup sugar
- 1/4 cup non-hydrogenated shortening
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/4 cup firm silken tofu
- 2 tbsp melted margarine
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 2 tsp cinnamon
- 3/4 cup chopped pecans

METHOD
1. Mix 1 1/2 cups of the flour with yeast in a large bowl.
2. Heat milk, 1/4 cup of sugar, shortening, and salt in a saucepan with high sides on med-lo heat until shortening melts. Add in tofu and blend with a hand blender until very smooth. Alternately, stick it in a blender and blend away. Add to flour.
3. Beat dough with a hand mixer/beater on low for 1 min. Then beat on high for 3 mins until smooth. Add in enough of the remaining flour to make a soft dough. Knead in a counter top mixer with a dough hook, or by hand on a floured surface, until smooth.
4. Place in a clean bowl well greased with margarine, turning dough to coat in margarine. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm place for an hour and a half, or until doubled in size.
5. Punch dough down and roll into a 10" x 14" rectangle. Brush with melted butter. Combine 1/2 cup sugar, cinnamon, and pecans and sprinkle evenly over dough. Roll up like a jelly roll along the long side and seal the seam. Bring the two ends together and seal the seam (i.e. make a ring). Place on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper.
6. Use a serrated knife to cut slices in the dough about 1 inch apart, and about half of the way through the ring (start by the seam and work your way around). Turn each 1" section a bit so they are on a bit of an angle. Cover with a towel and let rise for 45 mins
7. Bake at 350 for 20-25 mins, until outside is a deep golden brown.
8. When cooled but still a bit warm, drizzle with glaze: 1 cup icing sugar mixed with 2 tbsp soymilk and 1/2 tsp vanilla.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Holiday Stew

I have been tossing around this dish in my head for a few days. How to make something that tastes like Christmas is coming? Do you serve with rice? Noodles? Do you bake it? Roast it? Fry it? I finally settled on a stew--warm and hearty. The thyme and sage remind me of stuffing, and the roasted chestnuts and chickpeas work really well together. Cranberries add a nice splash of tart flavour to finish everything off.

INGREDIENTS
- 30 chestnuts
- 2 tbsp oil
- 1 small yellow onion, diced
- 1 small red onion, diced
- 1 celery stalk, diced
- 1 can chickpeas, drained and rinsed
- 3 tsp sage
- 1/2 tsp dried rosemary, crushed
- 2 tsp thyme
- 1/2 tsp paprika
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon
- 1 cup apple juice
- 2 large (or 4 small) Yukon Gold potatoes, scrubbed and diced
- 1 cup fresh cranberries
- 3 cups of water
- 2 tsp soy sauce
- 3 generous tbsp flour
- 1/3 cup plain soy milk
- 1/4 cup vegan "chicken" broth powder
- 1/2 cup dried cranberries
- salt and pepper to taste

METHOD
1. First, roast the chestnuts. Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Use a sharp paring knife to cut/punch an X through the shell of each chestnut (lets the steam escape). Place nuts, X side up, on a baking sheet and roast for about 20 mins, until shell splits and peels back around the X. Set aside to cool.
2. Heat oil in a stockpot over medium heat. Saute onions and celery until browned. Add chickpeas and spices and saute an additional two minutes. (While onions are cooking, slice chestnuts in half and peel).
3. Add in apple juice to deglaze pot. Add in potatoes, cranberries, water, and soy sauce. Bring to bubbling. Lower heat, cover, and simmer for 15 mins, or until potatoes are softened.
4. Mix flour into soy milk (I put both in a small container with a lid and shake). Add to pot and mix well. Add in broth powder. Bring to bubbling and let thicken.
5. Add in dried cranberries and chestnuts and cook for 5 mins. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Cashew and Tofu Stirfry

The delivery of our "new" fridge and stove was delayed by a snow storm, but they are now up and running. The extra capacity of the new fridge is amplified by the fact that we still have not gone grocery shopping. That made dinner a bit of a challenge. This is a variation of a recipe my Mom sent me a while ago which fit perfectly with the few things we had.
INGREDIENTS
- 1 pkg tofu, cubed
- 1 tbsp oil
- 1 head of broccoli, chopped into florets
- 1 pepper (green or red), large dice
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- 1" piece of ginger, minced
- 1/4 cup soy sauce
- 1/4 cup hoisin sauce
- 3/4 cup water
- 2 tbsp cornstarch
- juice of 1 lime
- few drops of sesame oil
- 1/2 cup raw cashews

METHOD:
1. Prep the tofu. I made crispy tofu, but you could also press and cube the tofu for a lower fat version.
2. Mix soy sauce, hoisin sauce, water, cornstarch, lime juice, and sesame oil in a small bowl.
3. Heat oil in a wok on med-hi. Stir fry broccoli for 3 mins, add pepper and fry for 2 mins. Add garlic and ginger and (and tofu if you are not using crispy tofu) fry for 1 minute.
4. Add in sauce mixture. Bring to bubbling and cook for about 2 mins, until broccoli is softened but still crunchy.
5. Stir in tofu (if you are using crispy tofu) and cashews and heat through. Serve over rice.

Stir Fried Chilly Noodles

I belong to the class of people who believe that Maggi Noodles is one of the best of human creations. During many weeknights I have found solace in that one bowl of quick-fix dinner, often reminding myself of how my mom would disapprove of the preserves and other stuff added in their masala. Recently, I found plain noodles in the stores, called Chinese Egg Hakka Noodles. I bought two packets and made quick and light noodles for dinner one night. Came out so well that I photographed it immediately :D


Stir Fried Chilly Noodles




What I Used:

Plain noodles - 1 packet
Crushed garlic - 4 cloves
Coarsely ground red chillies - 4
Garam Masala - 1.5 tsp
Turmeric - one pinch
Coriander leaves - for garnishing
Salt - to taste

How I Made It:

1. Cook the noodles in sufficient water with added salt. Adding a little oil to this makes the noodles not stick together. One done, drain the water and keep aside.

2. Heat 1 tbsp oil. Lightly fry the garlic, chilly, masala and turmeric and then add the noodles. Adjust oil and let the noodles fry for a while. Remove from fire, garnish with chopped coriander leaves and serve hot.



How do you make your noodles quick and flavourful?