Recipes and musings from my vegan kitchen. Mostly food-related, with the odd mention of travel, fashion and films.

"You can't just eat good food. You've got to talk about it, too." -Kurt Vonnegut

1.29.2014

wishlist wednesday



Today's theme is music.

A. I wish I could have a guitar lesson with Josh Homme.
B. I wish I could eat a meal with Alex Kapranos.
C. I wish I could get drunk with Scott Hutchison.
D. I wish I could do karaoke with Karen O.

...preferably in that order. My birthday IS coming up, you know, and a girl can dream...

Happy wishful thinking!

1.26.2014

brunch with the ladies

Greetings from Brooklyn!

I took a last minute trip to visit my sister and her awesome roommates, who just happen to be former coworkers of mine, in their sweet new digs. In addition to the promise of brunch with some of my favorite people, I get to cuddle with this guy:
Nephew Jack

It's really a win-win. Not to mention we're walking distance to Champ's, the best vegan diner and currently my favorite vegan restaurant in general. So many options, so reasonably priced. Go there.

Oh, and someone foolishly thought it was a good idea to introduce me to Dun-well Donuts. A monster has been created, and I will no doubt have dreams about these bad boys for weeks to come.


I hope your weekend is as lovely as the donuts I am about to cram into my face. Happy brunching!


1.24.2014

foreign lands!


Today my pastotto recipe is being featured for Foodie Friday over at the Wandering Dago's blog!
This fantastic food truck does Italian with a twist, combining endless fusions of various cuisines, and literally has something for everyone. The meat lover and vegan alike will find a plethora of seriously tasty options.

Plus, the owners, Andrea and Brandon are some of the coolest people around. If you stop by the truck, make sure to stay and chat. It's worth it.

Their blog focuses mainly on discussing food trucks as an (awesome) option for catering weddings. Most people associate truckside service with lunch and picnics, for which they're great, it's true, but not as many people realize that they're also a stellar way to cater weddings and events. Brandon answers FAQ and discusses the process of having a truck-catered event, and it's a really helpful resource. And it doesn't hurt that on Fridays they feature different recipes from local chefs and foodies!

Here is the link to their website, and here's a link to my feature!

Happy eating!


1.22.2014

wishlist wednesday


Today's theme is DIY.

a. I wish to update a piece of furniture with these.
b. I wish to cover my ugly radiators with something kind of like this.
c. I wish to organize my necklaces with something akin to these.
d. I wish to do this to some champagne flutes.

Happy wishful thinking!

1.20.2014

pastotto

This, friends, is a post you need to pay attention to. I am about to do you all a massive favor. It will involve yelling at you, but I yell because I care.

STOP COOKING YOUR PASTA IN PLAIN, BORING WATER AND STOP EATING PLAIN, BORING PASTA. THERE IS NO REASONABLE EXCUSE FOR THIS BEHAVIOR. JUST STOP IT.

Let's face it: pasta is dull. Unless you find authentic, homemade stuff, pasta is bland as can be, and even finding homemade doesn't guarantee it's going to be flavorful. Plus, half the time the sauce is too thin and just rolls off the noodles, and what you end up with is a forgettable, disappointing meal, which is why people end up just dumping mass amounts of cheese on top, or even worse, that "Parmesan" dust that doesn't even need to be refrigerated.

Never again! Now your pasta can actually taste like things!

There is one simple rule for pasta to be rich and flavorful: cook it like risotto. Start off like you're making the sauce (saute some onion/shallots/garlic/tomatoes/whathaveyou), then add oil and dry noodles, then broth in half-cup increments til the pasta has absorbed it all, then finish it like you're finishing the sauce (with "cream," a thickener, etc) and that's all. Since the pasta is cooking with  the sauce ingredients and stock rather than water, it's infused with all that flavor. Delish.

Here's one I messed around with to bring to my holiday potluck party on Friday. It's lovely as is, but next time I may also finish it with a bechemel, just to give it even more lushness.


Mushroom Leek Pastotto

Earth Balance butter and olive oil for sauteing
1/2 lb pasta (gemelli is a classic, but I quite like to use orecchiette or campanelle)
2 cups sliced mushrooms
1/2 to 1 cup leeks, thinly sliced
1 shallot, minced
1 tbsp minced garlic (I use jarred, minced garlic because I like how much mellower it is than fresh)
1/2 cup white wine
2.5-3 cups vegetable stock (I never use tomato-based stocks since mostly they make things taste like tomato paste, and here it's especially important to avoid them because you don't want to overpower the delicate flavors of the mushrooms and leeks)

 Heat a heavy and deep skillet over medium heat and melt 2 tbsp Earth Balance in it. Add the shallot, garlic and leeks and saute for a minute or two, then add mushrooms. Cook, stirring frequently, until the mushrooms brown. Add the pasta and a tablespoon or two of olive oil, and stir and toss the pasta until it's evenly coated and glossy. Add the white wine and simmer, stirring frequently, until the wine is mostly absorbed. Add 1/2 a cup of stock and repeat the process. Once absorbed, add another 1/2 cup, and so on, until the stock is absorbed and the pasta is tender. Serve piping hot, and you just try not to eat 3 helpings, I dare you.

It's so easy to vary this recipe, and use whatever herbs, spices and vegetables to different effects, plus the whole shebang takes less than 1/2 an hour, so it's a nice last minute meal idea.

Enjoy!



1.19.2014

perfect potluck


Last night was the holiday potluck my manager holds every year. Since it was both the last Christmas-y event I have and the official end of the season, as well as the first time in four years I've been able to make it to the party, I was pretty excited. I decided I wanted to bring two dishes, and figured I'd fool around and make something up, and then bring something that's a sure bet.

I'll share both recipes, but here's the sure bet first. It's adapted from Alicia Silverstone's "The Kind Diet," which is a book I'd highly recommend and played a large role in my becoming vegan in the first place. I've just tweaked the recipe a little bit so it's a little thicker and more like a stew than a soup. It's delicious on it's own, though I sometimes spoon it over whole grain couscous or polenta. It'd also be lovely over some bulghur.


Alicia Silverstone's Sweet Potato and Lentil Stew

Oil for sauteing (I just use olive, but the book recommends safflower)
1 onion, diced
2 small tomatoes, diced
1 tsp fresh grated ginger
1.5 tsp turmeric
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp ground coriander
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/8 tsp cayenne
salt to taste
3 sweet potatoes, peeled and diced
2.5 cups vegetable broth
1 cup dry brown lentils

Heat the oil in a sizable, heavy bottomed pan. Saute the onion til softened, about two minutes, then add tomatoes and ginger and saute two more minutes. Add the spices and a bit of salt and stir it all together. After a minute or two, rinse the lentils and add to the pot, followed by the sweet potatoes and broth. Bring to a boil, reduce to a strong simmer, cover, and let cook about 20-30 minutes, til the tomatoes and lentils are soft. And that's all she wrote; it's a mindlessly simple recipe and really tasty. It's also fantastic comfort food, especially on these chilly nights, and guilt-free, to boot.

1.16.2014

irony

When last we met I was fearlessly going on about how no one and no thing could steal away my ability to meander around the internet aimlessly. Appropriately, two days later I was laid up in bed with a bout of colduenzanitis so severe that the mere act of gazing across the room longingly at my computer would require a recovery nap. After three hellish days of delirium (it doesn't take a very high fever before my brain melts into a useless puddle of madness) and more mucus than I care to even think about, I started to slowly recover, and by some miracle, feel even better than before my illness. Possibly because we've reached the halfway mark in January, possibly because the weather has been positively balmy, or maybe I'm just thankful to have regained locomotion.

Or it could be the antibiotics talking. You never really know.

Anywho, I've bypassed this Wishlist Wednesday, but expect a return to regular programming next week, albeit with a post that makes fewer boasts about my god-given right to procrastination.

Hubris, ladies and gents. It'll get you every time.

1.08.2014

inaugural wishlist wednesday

Well, it's disgusting outside.
I am NOT a lady that was built for the cold and right now it's about 7 degrees outside. As happens every year, January feels like it's never going to end, and we're not even halfway through. I couldn't tell you whether it's the lack of vitamin D, or the inability to frolic outside, or the impending risk of death by ice/hypothermia/space heater fire, but for some reason January is my least cheerful month of the year. Followed closely by March, but that's another blog post for another time.

The icy weather may take away my sloth-like morning "run," my favorite seasonal fruits and vegetables, and all of the feeling in my extremities, but it can never take away my ability to squander hours on the internet daydreaming of (mostly) impossible things. And to honor that noble art of "wasting time," I present you with my first ever weekly post:

Wishlist Wednesday!

Woohoo! I've decided that each Wednesday I'll put up things I've been daydreaming about/pining after/considering tattooing on my face. We can share our hopes and dreams. That's a thing, right?

My hopes and dreams this week are pretty primal: to stay warm. Well, to get warm in the first place and then stay that way.


A. I wish I could live in this house.
B. I wish I could put this sofa in my cute little house.
C. I wish I could wrap up in this blanket (from what might be my favorite store in the world.)
D. I wish I could make myself a dirty chai latte with this.


Happy wishful thinking : )

1.06.2014

a 100% plant-based log!


One of my very favorite Christmas traditions is making the yule log I bring in for my coworkers. A buche de noel is one of those lovely dishes that appear somewhat complicated and time-consuming, but is in fact incredibly simple and fun to make.

This was the first year I tried to bake a vegan buche de noel, and simply made substitutions in the recipe I've used for years. After some tweaking, and a somewhat unsuccessful attempt at using rice-milk whipped cream as filling (NOT recommended unless you like your logs rather flat and puddly), I came out with a tasty and foolproof recipe.

The jellyroll:

1 cup flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup sugar
1 tbsp and 2 tsp Ener-G egg replacer
1/4 cup and 2 tbsp warm water
1 tsp vanilla
3 tbsp room temperature water

First things first: whisk together the warm water and Ener-G in a small dish until are the clumps are gone and it starts to foam nicely.

Next, preheat the oven to 350F and grease a 10x15 in jellyroll pan with Earth Balance or the like. If you don't have a jellyroll pan, don't sweat it. Fold up a sheet of aluminum foil and wall off 10 x 15 inches in a regular baking pan, using the Earth Balance to make it stick. Grease both the pan AND aluminum foil, then line with wax paper, and grease that, too.


Like so! The nonstickiest of nonstick.

Next, sift the flour, baking powder and salt together three times. Set aside.

In the bowl of a mixer, beat the Ener-G mixture, gradually adding sugar til completely combined and frothy. Beat in vanilla and water. Add flour mixture in thirds, blending completely each time. Once smooth, pour into prepared pan, and use a spatula to spread the batter evenly into all the corners.

Bake for 12-15 minutes. It won't brown at all, so just go by the firmness in the middle.

Before the cake is out of the oven, prepare to roll it up. Place a clean dishtowel, a smooth cotton one, preferably; definitely not a fluffy one, flat on the counter and dust it heavily with powdered sugar.

While the cake is baking, prepare the espresso buttercream frosting:

1/3 cup Earth Balance, softened
1/4 cup vegetable shortening (I use Crisco sticks)
2 tbsp instant espresso dissolved in 1 tbsp warm almond milk (or soy, potato potahto)
2 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
3/4 cup confectioner's sugar, sifted.

Cream the Earth Balance and shortening together til combined and fluffy. Add 1/4 cup of the sugar and beat til smooth. Add the cocoa and espresso (Note- if you don't have instant espresso, brew SERIOUSLY strong coffee and use 1 tbsp of that), then the rest of the sugar and beat til smooth. If it seems a bit too wet, add more sugar. If too stiff, a dash of almond milk. It's buttercream, you probably know the drill.

By now the cake should be ready. Take it out of the oven and let it sit for just a minute or two before inverting the pan onto the sugar-dusted towel. Gently peel off the wax paper. Then, sprinkling copious amounts of sugar on the towel as you go, gently roll up the cake and towel together:




Make sure you use tons of sugar anywhere the towel touches cake. As long as you do that, unrolling it after it's cooled is a breeze. 
Once you've rolled it up completely, set it on a board or plate someplace to cool.

All that's left to make is the filling, a basic vanilla buttercream.

1/4 cup Earth Balance, softened
1/4 cup vegetable shortening (Crisco again)
1 tsp vanilla
1.5 - 2 cups confectioner's sugar, sifted
2 tbsp almond milk (more/less as needed)

Same protocol as before: cream Earth Balance and shortening, add vanilla and sugar, cream 'til smooth and add almond milk until you get the consistency you'd like.

Once the cake feels cool (depending how chilly the place you let it sit, it should take 20-30 minutes to cool properly), gently unroll it from the towel and roll each end part of the way back up to keep it from cracking.


Spread the vanilla buttercream and roll up as you go.



Place it seam side down on whatever you'll be serving it on (this particular cake I brought down to Jersey with me, so I just frosted it in the tupperware) and frost each end with espresso buttercream, sealing off the vanilla filling.


Frost the rest of the cake, and use a metal offset spatula or a butter knife to create a bark effect:


Some people leave their cake like that, or use a fork to create an even bark-ier texture, and if you'd like, use powdered sugar to look like a dusting of snow. Sometimes I'll make marzipan mushrooms to serve with it, and one of these years I'm going to make a smaller jellyroll and create a branch coming off the log.

That's it! The whole thing only takes a little over an hour and it's a really tasty treat, with the lightness of the cake offsetting the sweetness of the frostings.

A note about the filling: traditionally I used to fill the log with whipped cream rather than frosting, which I tried to emulate with vegan canned whip, to no avail. If you have a vegan whipped cream recipe that you think would keep it's shape and not absorb into the cake, I say give it a go (and send along the recipe!) but what's nice about using vanilla buttercream (aside from being seriously delicious) is that, unlike the cream, it's shelf stable, so you can leave it at room temperature and not have a firm buttercream when you slice into it.

Alright, seeing as it's Epiphany today, and officially the end of Christmas, I have to go pack away my Christmas village and garlands and such. And start thinking about gifts for next year, naturally.

But I'm not taking down my tree just yet. Not until the temperature gets back above, oh, 20 degrees.

Speaking of which, best of luck to everyone affected by the snowy madness across the country! 72 days 'til Spring, folks!

1.03.2014

chocolate peppermint thumbprint cookies


Well, I managed to make it home from Jersey, though running an errand in Queens on the way back did almost end our journey in a sizable snowbank.

But I'm home safe in time for mother nature to dump more freezing rain and snow on us in two days. Think maybe it's January?

Time has taught me the best thing to do in preparation for a snowstorm is stock up on canned items, make sure your thickest socks and sweatpants are clean, and have at least one type of cookie hoarded in your kitchen. These adorable little delights are a fun twist on a classic cookie, and since they're so quick and simple, it's a perfect recipe to make with kids on a snow day.

Incidentally, having this recipe in your arsenal is a perfect excuse for always keeping Junior Mints in the house, which is never a bad thing.

1.5 cups all-purpose flour
1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1/3 cup almond milk
1 tsp vanilla
2/3 cup sugar
30  Junior Mints

      Preheat oven to 350 F. Sift together flour, cocoa, salt and baking soda. In a separate bowl, blend together oil, milk, vanilla and sugar til completely combined. Add dry ingredients in 3 additions, and once completely blended it should be thick enough to roll into balls. Roll into 30 balls and place on lined cookie sheet. Bake for 6 minutes, then remove from oven and using a small metal measuring spoon (1/2 or 1/4 tsp works best), indent the middle to make the thumbprint. Place a Junior Mint in each indentation and return to the oven for 6 more minutes. Remove and let cool on the cookie sheet before moving to a rack and cool completely before storing in an airtight container.

looks like a snow day

I can currently only barely make out the buildings across the street from the apartment I'm at in Jersey City. While it's really gorgeous, and I'm pretty pumped that I'm here, with my car nicely parked in the garage rather than upstate, where I'd have the lovely task of digging it out, I also can no longer deny the fact that I'm probably not making it home tomorrow.

Oh well. We've got tea and cocoa to last about 8 years, and a liquor store on the ground floor, so I'll make due.

Incidentally, here's the regular view:
Not too shabby, right? While I'm not about to move here, I'm definitely warming up to Jersey City.

Hope everyone is safe and warm during this mess!

1.02.2014

it really IS the little things



My mother has instilled in me many life lessons over the years, and they're hard-wired into my head at this point. Clean the kitchen as you cook. Il faut souffrir pour ĂȘtre belle. Moisturize. Stretch. It's bad luck to put shoes on the table. If you're thirsty you're already dehydrated. And so forth. Though that second one is in jest. Mostly.

But one of her instructions that has firmly stuck with me is to never underestimate the pure magic and luxury that is having a programmable coffee pot right in your bedroom. 

And Jo, unsurprisingly, was not mistaken. If I can only give you one suggestion to make the whole of 2014 a good year, it would be to buy a coffee pot immediately. Or just move the one from your kitchen. It's astonishing how much joy I get each morning when I turn off my alarm and hear the gentle trickle of lovely caffeine from the corner. It's never too early in the day to have hot coffee in your bloodstream, and what better to entice you from your bed on an awful January morning?

If I can find a way to have my oatmeal ready when I wake up, too, then I might just become a morning person after all.

Happy waking up!

1.01.2014

happiest of new years!


Source

As each year always is, 2013 was chock full of ups and downs, and I can't say I'm sad to see it go. But rather than dwell on the past, I'm glad to look to the future of 2014 and ring in the new year with hope and happiness!

May your night be filled with tasty champagne and fantastic friends!

Happy 2014!

Northern Ireland, New Year's Day 2013