Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Cream of Celeriac Soup

4 peeled celeriacs
2 small potatoes.
2c soy milk
.25 c butterlike substance
.5 t soup bullion concentrate
.5 medium onion
.5 head garlic
1T olive oil

Boil a pot of water, then put in 3 celeriacs and the potatoes. When forkable, remove and mix with milk, butter, and bullion in a blender.

Meanwhile, sauté onion and garlic in a little oil in a big pot. Add the above mixture, then thin or season as desired. Add the remaining celeriac, diced. Cook for a minute or an hour.

Glazed celery garnish:
2 stalks chopped celery
1c water
2 T butter substitute
1-2 T honey or raw sugar
Sauté for 10-15 minutes.

Serve with these scones or other soup bread.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Costa Rica recipe cards ...



These cards are adorable - and there are recipes on the reverse that I will add in here soon. (I am framing the three for my kitchen ... but wanted to scan them for the blog before they go under glass.)

Platanos in Gloria

2 big ripe plantains
2 cinnamon sticks
1 cup of sugar
1-1/2 cups of water
vegetable oil as needed

Peel the plantains and cut them into three pieces, then cut again lengthwise into two or three slices. Bring the water, sugar and cinnamon to boil, then lower the heat and simmer until the mixture becomes a syrup. In a separate pan, fry the plantains in a little oil until soft; remove them and daub away the oil on a paper towel. Now place the plantains in the simmering syrup, letting them absorb the candied sauce.
Serve this heavely dessert to friends!

{The best version I had were regular bananas and sliced in rounds, not lengthwise and the cinnamon was great - this is a breakfast treat too)

Tortillas Caliente !! Si Si !!!



Tortillas

2 C of flour
1 cup of water
2 pieces of plastic (from supermarket bags)
cut into 7 in. diameter circles

Please the flour in a large bowl. Add the water gradually and stop adding when the dough doesn't stick to your hands. Knead the dough for 10 minutes. Place a small portion of the dough in the center of the plastic circle and start shaping it by simultaneously pressing the dough (gently!) and rotating the plastic circle.

Heat a skillet on the stove. Remove the tortilla from the plastic and place it (same side up) on the skillet; cook it for 3 minutes. Flip it over and cook it for 3 more mintues. Flip the tortilla a third time; the tortilla will rise and cook on the inside. If it doesn't rise, try pressing on the edges with a napkin, so the center can get unstuck.

You can eat tortillas with fresh cheese, fried beans, or ... anything else that suits your fancy.

{Note - all of the tortillas I remember having in CR were corn tho ...}

Tofu Ceviche - Es Possible ? let's find out



Ceviche

1 pound of fresh white tofu
1 large onion, chopped
1/2 bell pepper, chopped
2 shots lime juice
1 shot ginger ale
Salt and pepper (to taste)
Chopped fresh corriander (to taste)

Cut the tofu into small pieces and place in a bowl. Add the onion, bell pepper, lime juice and seasonings. The lime juice 'cooks' the tofu but you need to stop the process adding ginger ale into the preparation. Mix gently and leave it for 1 hour in the refrigerator.

Serve cold with crackers. Some say mermaids can drive sailors to their doom, and so too can the craving for this cool and tangy ceviche.

{Obviously the original recipe says 'fish' everywhere I put tofu so let us know if this works with tofu)

Friday, February 16, 2007

Celeriac Red Beans and Rice with Celeriac Remoulade and Celeriac


I've started this tradition of making something new-to-me each Thursday for dinner. I've been getting tons of celeriac from my work. I'd never heard of the stuff before a couple weeks ago. I did some research and found that it's often used in rémoulade sauces, including Cajun remoulades. Here's my naïve interpretation:

Skin and boil two celeriacs until easily stabbed with a fork (like testing potatoes).

Soak and cook 2 cups (dry) red beans, dump the water and put them back in the pot. Mash about a quarter of them with a potato smasher, add half a celeriac (diced), kale, garlic and seasonings.

In a pan, heat 2 cups uncooked rice and a chopped onion with 1-2 T oil, coating thoroughly. Add broth and seasonings.

In a blender, mix
1 celeriac, boiled and chopped a bit
.5 c walnuts
.5 c Vegenaise
1 green onion
1 fistfull cilantro
.5 lemons' worth of juice
mustard, paprika, salt, pepper, and vinegar to taste
thin with water if desired.

Because two types of celeriac wasn't enough, I grated the remaining half-a-celeriac as a garnish. Serve with a chili-less cornbread for a purple-yellow-brown-green-white meal.

Reading Supplements

Here are the two best nutrition/diet food articles that I've run across in the past 6 months. They're both longish, but enlightening.

Nutrients and nutrition---science, politics and fads: Unhappy Meals by Michael Pollan.

Cow milk: The Milk Letter by Robert M. Kradjian.
(This article made my mom stop drinking cow milk. She's practically vegan now. Who would have thought that milk increases risk of lung cancer?)

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Cornbread and Chili

This was eaten faster that a camera could snap a picture, so you'll have to use your imagination. I recently acquired a huge high-walled cast iron pan, big enough to fry up a birthday cake and still fit the lid on. It's from Australia and was made in the 17th century, more or less.

I wanted to make a surprise dinner for my love, one that would fully utilize the great pan's abilities. On a veggie recipe website that I can no longer find, it was revealed to me that one can:
1) Make chili in a cast-iron pan
2) Mix up some cornbread
3) Bake the cornbread on top of the chili, in the oven
My mind expanded, I immediately set forth to forge new chili and cornbread recipes worthy of this.

The chili was made by power-soaking 2 cups of mixed pinto, red, and kidney beans, then pressure-cooking them for 10 minutes. Power-soaking is what you do when you've forgotten to soak the beans for 8 hours. Bring beans to a boil at pressure, remove from heat, then ignore them for an hour or however much time you have left before they need to be food. Change their water, then pressure-cook 'em.

In a little oil, fry up
2 onions, diced large, then add...
2 cups of your favorite broth
a double espresso
about a cup of TVP
a can of tomato paste
a big can of whole tomatoes (fresh tomatoes are rare here, this time of year)
chili powder, pepper, cumin, oregano, and whatever else strikes your fancy
beans, as above
two Portabello mushies roasted in a dry skillet
a head of garlic, or two

My apologies to more authentic chili cooks. See, we live in a horrible deprived place where anything spicier than a bell pepper is dried, ground, and labeled only "chili" (or sometimes "chile").

Cornbread:
1 c soymilk
1 T apple cider vinegar
3 t egg replacer
.25 c water
.33 c butter substitute
.5 c whole wheat flour
1 c fine ground corn flour
.5 c coarse ground corn flour
.25 c brown sugar
1 T baking powder
.5 t salt
.5 t black pepper
1 can corn, or equivalent
1 can green chiles

Whisk milk and vinegar; whisk egg replacer and water; melt butter, mix everything together. Level chili, gently spread batter on top, bake at 350-375F for 15-25 minutes. This works because it's a thin layer of cornbread. If thick cornbread is more your thing, bake in an 8x8 pan.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Spectacular Fruit Salads in Costa Rica



After the butterfly training in the Central Valley and Caribbean side of the country, my trip took me over to the Pacific Coast where there were actually a few vegetarian/vegan restaurant options - even a Thai place with a good yellow curry and tofu! The fruit salads were the highlights though .. this one in the surfer community of Dominical was small diced mango, papaya, pineapple, avocado with rings of onions, sliced tomato, cucumber and a tangy dressing ... Further north, on the Pacific side of the Nicoya Penninsula, in another surfer community, Santa Theresa, my mountainside little BnB suggested a Rasta place on the beach for a vegetarian lunch - theirs was a big bowlful that included watermelon, kiwi, mango, papaya, pineapple and also had shredded coconut and some raisins. All to some godo reggae tunes, many in Espanol... These salads were quite the masterpieces!... Another great meal was a superb cold tomato/cucumber gazpacho in the bohemian young hippie town of Montezuma, served with a side of warm tortillas and avocado. Desert was a chocolate volcano cake - triangular slice with chocolate sauce for lava and vanilla ice cream for the puffs of smoke.

Rural life in a Costa Rica kitchen and restaurant



On the Butterfly Tour we were taken to the home of a family with 5 daughters - all involved in butterfly breeding. They prepared a traditional Costa Rican lunch for us. Rice, beans, and a stew with chayote squash that was excellent. Here they are in their kitchen - notice, it is NOT an electric or even gas stove ... it is wood burning. This family lives on the slopes of the Poas Volcano, just outside of San Jose in the Central Valley, overlooking rolling foothills of endless coffee plants.



We also were taken out to lunch on the Caribbean side of the intercontinental mountains, which is the wetter area with bananas, pineapple, papayas. These gentlemen provided the marimba accompaniment to our lunch and then we went on a nice, sunny, peaceful boat ride along the river and saw monkeys in the trees, giant HUGE iguanas, caiman (small aligators) and different birds. The food reflects a standard meal - staples are rice and beans and plaintains (yes, EVERY meal) and a micture of vegetables. Meat eaters also had chicken, beef or fish optionis at most meals. For someone who loves rice and beans, it was just too much repitition ... but mornings were best as the beans and rice were mixed in a refry with little red sweet peppers.