We ate a lot of dumplings in honour of Chinese New Year. I was thinking about potential side dishes, in case only dumplings wouldn't be a proper meal, and suddenly remembered super tasty boiled peanuts we'd eaten with dumplings from a food stall at Vippa (food stall place in shipping building by the ferry port) in Oslo. I couldn't quite remember how they'd been, other than that they were brown and tasted like soy sauce... We had some peanuts, so I followed this recipe. We also ate some miso aubergine with our dumplings.
1 cup raw shelled peanuts with skins (only had roasted salted ones so rinsed them and used them)
2 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp mirin (or white wine)
1 tbsp sugar
2 tbsp corn syrup (used maple syrup)
1 cup water
1/4 tsp sesame seeds
Put the peanuts in a small pan with 2 cups water, bring to the boil, and boil for about 5 min. Drain. Put the peanuts back in the pan with the soy sauce, mirin, sugar, syrup and water. Bring to the boil. Simmer over a medium heat until most of the liquid has evaporated, approx 20-25 min, stirring occasionally (I found it took a little longer, but then also thought maybe I went too far - they were a little bit too sticky). Sprinkle with the sesame seeds and maybe some chopped coriander, and serve.
Labels
00 flour
7-spice
8-ball squash
açaí
acorn squash
afternoon tea
agar
ale
alfalfa
allspice
almond butter
almond essence
almond meal
almonds
alphabet
amaranth
amchoor
american
anise seed
apple
apple cheese
apple juice
apple sauce
apricots
artichoke
asiers
asparagus
aubergine
australian
autumn
avocado
balls
balsamic vinegar
banana
banana skin
bannock
barberries
barley
basil
bath bomb
batter
bay
BBQ sauce
bean burger
bean pasta
beans
beansprouts
beauty
beer
beeswax
beet greens
beetroot
belize
beluga lentils
berbere
berry
bicarbonate of soda
birch syrup
birthday
biscuits
black beans
black eyed beans
black garlic
black pepper
black trumpet
blackberry
blewit
blue cheese
blueberry
bok choi
borlotti beans
borscht
boston
bran
brandy
brazil nut
brazilian
bread
bread flour
breadcrumbs
breadsticks
breakfast
brezeln
british
broad beans
broccoli
broccolini
brown lentils
brown rice
brown sugar
brownies
brussels sprouts
bubble
bubble mixture
bubbles
buckwheat
bulghur wheat
buns
butter
buttermilk
butternut squash
cabbage
cacao
cajun spice
cake
camping
canada
candied peel
candles
cannelini beans
capers
caramel
caraway
cardamom
caribbean
carob molasses
carrot greens
carrots
cashew
cauliflower
cayenne
celeriac
celery
celery seed
ceps
cereal
champagne
chanterelle
chard
cheese
cheese rind
cherry
chervil
Chestnut
chia
chia seeds
chicken of the woods
chickpea
chickpea flour
chickpea miso
chickpeas
child-friendly
chilli
chips
chives
chocolate
christmas
chutney
cider
cider vinegar
cinnamon
citric acid
clapshot
cloves
coarse salt
cocoa
coconut
coconut kefir
coconut milk
coconut oil
coconut sugar
coconut vinegar
coffee
collard greens
compote
cookies
copenhagen
cordial
coriander
coriander seed
cornbread
cornflour
cornmeal
cornstarch
cottage cheese
courgette
courgette flowers
couscous
crabapple
crackers
cranberries
cranberry
cranberry sauce
cream
cream cheese
cream of tartar
creme de cassis
crumble
cucumber
cumin
cupuaçu
curd
currants
curry
curry leaves
curry paste
custard
dal
dandelion-ramp miso
danish
date
date molasses
dehydrator
demerara sugar
digestive biscuits
dill
dinosaur
dip
donuts
dosa
dragonfish
dressing
dried fruit
drink
dry tofu
dukkah
dulce de leche
easter
edamame
egg
egg yolk
elderberry
elderflower
elephant
english
epsom salts
essential oil
evaporated milk
fake milk
fennel
fennel seed
fenugreek
feta
fiddleheads
fig
filo
fire cooking
firm tofu
flan
flapjack
flatbread
flour
flowers
focaccia
fondant
food colouring
football
freekeh
fresh yeast
frittata
fritters
galangal
galette
garam masala
garlic
garlic scapes
gazpacho
german
gin
ginger
ginger wine
gingerbread
glass noodles
gluten-free
glutinous rice flour
gnocchi
goat's cheese
golden beets
golden raisins
golden syrup
gooseberry
gorgonzola
graham flour
granola
grape
grape molasses
grapefruit
greek
green beans
green pepper
green plantain
green tea
green tomato
haggis
haricot beans
harissa
hazelnut
hedgehog mushroom
hemp seeds
holy basil
hominy
honey
horseradish
hot cross buns
hummus
ice lollies
iceland
icing
icing sugar
indian
injera
irish
italy
jackfruit
jam
jamaican
japanese
jelly
jicama
kahlua
kale
kale chips
kalonji
kefir
ketchup
kohlrabi
koji
kombucha
lasagne
latkes
lavender
lebkuchen
leek
leek flowers
lemon
lemongrass
lentils
lettuce
lime
lime leaves
linseed
lion's mane mushroom
liquorice powder
lovage
lunch
macadamia nuts
mace
mahlab
maitake
mango
maple syrup
marble
marigold
marmalade
marzipan
masa harina
mascarpone
mash
melon
membrillo
mexican
milk
millet
mince pies
mincemeat
mint
mirin
miso
mixed spice
mochi
moghrabieh
molasses
morel
mousse
mozzarella
muesli
muffins
mulberry
mulberry molasses
mung beans
mushroom
mushroom powder
mushroom stock
mustard
mustard oil
naan
nachos
nasturtium
new york
no-bake cake
noodles
not food
nut butter
nut roast
nutella
nutmeg
nutritional yeast
oat yoghurt
oatmeal
oats
okara
okra
olive oil
olives
onion
onion skins
onions
orange
orange blossom
orange juice
oregano
oyster mushroom
package
pancakes
panch phoran
papaya
papaya seeds
paprika
parkin
parmesan
parsley
parsnips
pasta
pastry
peach
peanut
peanut butter
pear
peas
pecan
pecan pie
pecorino
pepper
pesto
petersilienwurzel
philadelphia
physalis
pickle
picnic
pie
pine nuts
pineapple
pistachio
pizza
plantain
plum
polenta
pomegranate
pomegranate molasses
ponzu
popcorn
poppy seeds
porridge
potato
potluck
preserve
pretzels
prune
psyllium seed husk
pudding
pumpkin
pumpkin seed butter
pumpkin seeds
purple carrots
purple noodles
purple potato
puy lentils
pyo
quince
quinoa
radicchio
radish
radish greens
rainbow cake
raisins
raita
ramps
ras el hanout
raspberry
ratatouille
ravioli
red cabbage
red kidney beans
red lentils
red onion
red wine
red wine vinegar
redcurrant jelly
redcurrants
relish
restaurant
reykjavik
rhubarb
rice
rice flour
rice pudding
rice vinegar
ricotta
risotto
rocket
rolls
root veg chips
rose
rose harissa
rosemary
rugbrød
rum
runner beans
rye
saffron
sage
sake
salad
salsa
salsify
salt
sauce
sauerkraut
scones
scottish
sea buckthorn
seaweed
seeds
semolina
sesame oil
sesame seeds
sesame tofu
seville orange
shepherd's pie
shiso
silken tofu
skyr
slaw
sloe
snacks
snow
soba noodles
socca
soda bread
sodium hydroxide
soup
sour cherries
sour cream
south american
soy sauce
soybean
spaghetti
spaghetti squash
spätzle
spelt
spelt berries
spinach
spread
spring
spring onion
sprouts
squash
st. george's mushroom
star anise
stew
stout
strawberry
strawberry powder
sugar
sultana
sumac
summer
sunchoke
sundried tomato
sunflower seed butter
sunflower seeds
super firm tofu
sweet
sweet potato
sweetcorn
tacos
tahini
tamale
tamari
tamarind
tapioca flour
tarragon
tart
tea
tealoaf
teff
tempeh
thai
thyme
tiers
tinned peaches
tkemali
toast
tofu
tofu scramble
tomatillo
tomato
tomato puree
tonka bean
toronto
tortilla chips
tortillas
tray bake
treacle
truck
truffle
turmeric
turnip
turnip greens
tyttebær
udon
umeboshi
vanilla
vanilla bean
vegetable stock
veggie burger
vermouth
vine leaves
vinegar
walnut oil
walnuts
wasabi
watermelon
watermelon radish
wax
wheat berries
whisky
white balsamic vinegar
white beans
white chocolate
white pepper
white spelt flour
white wine
wholemeal
wild garlic
winter
wood ear
xanthan gum
yeast
yellow beans
yellow split peas
yoghurt
za'atar
zimtsterne
Showing posts with label soy sauce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soy sauce. Show all posts
Thursday, February 21, 2019
Monday, October 27, 2014
Oyster mushrooms
We went on a Musical Bike Ride the other day: starting at Longwood T, progressed from there to first music stop above Jamaica Pond, next JP Honk Band in the Arnold Arboretum, then a spot in Franklin Park overlooking the golf course, and finally the bear cages. We looped around Forest Hills Cemetery for a while on the way to the golf course spot, and I spotted at least two trees carrying oyster mushrooms. One in particular had masses (they looked exactly like the picture above taken from my mushroom book, even down to the delicate cobwebs), and I couldn't resist stopping quickly to grab a handful. Unfortunately they fell out of my pocket and I had to stop again and by the time we got going we'd lost everyone except a chap called Jonathan towing the music trailer...
Despite the drama we found the next spot (with music, thanks to Jonathan, even before everyone else), and the mushrooms made it home. We stir-fried them over high heat with garlic, chilli and soy sauce, and ate them with rice. I don't love oyster mushrooms. They are great in that they are substantial, have good texture, and come in large amounts, but the taste doesn't really do it for me.
Despite the drama we found the next spot (with music, thanks to Jonathan, even before everyone else), and the mushrooms made it home. We stir-fried them over high heat with garlic, chilli and soy sauce, and ate them with rice. I don't love oyster mushrooms. They are great in that they are substantial, have good texture, and come in large amounts, but the taste doesn't really do it for me.
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Kong ja ban
I bought soybeans for miso making, this recipe was on the back of the packet. It is Korean, I liked the sound of it, so why not give it a try - I have lots of soybeans. That's all I know.
1 cup dried soybeans
1/4 cup soy sauce
1 cup water
1/6 cup sugar
1/2 tbsp sesame oil
1 1/2 tbsp golden syrup (corn syrup in original recipe)
1/2 tbsp toasted sesame seeds
Soak soybeans in water for four hours. Drain and transfer to a pan. Add water, soy sauce and sugar and simmer for ~45 min, until the liquid is much reduced. The soybeans should retain a bit of bite. Finally, add the sesame oil, golden syrup and sesame seeds. Let cool before eating.
Hmm, wasn't sure about this at first - thought perhaps the instructions had lost something in translation: wondered if the beans were undercooked, and it was rather salty. But eating cold, with plenty of rice, the saltiness is mediated, the bite in the beans becomes nuttiness, and it ends up as a superior kind of baked beans.
1 cup dried soybeans
1/4 cup soy sauce
1 cup water
1/6 cup sugar
1/2 tbsp sesame oil
1 1/2 tbsp golden syrup (corn syrup in original recipe)
1/2 tbsp toasted sesame seeds
Soak soybeans in water for four hours. Drain and transfer to a pan. Add water, soy sauce and sugar and simmer for ~45 min, until the liquid is much reduced. The soybeans should retain a bit of bite. Finally, add the sesame oil, golden syrup and sesame seeds. Let cool before eating.
Hmm, wasn't sure about this at first - thought perhaps the instructions had lost something in translation: wondered if the beans were undercooked, and it was rather salty. But eating cold, with plenty of rice, the saltiness is mediated, the bite in the beans becomes nuttiness, and it ends up as a superior kind of baked beans.
Friday, January 10, 2014
Coconut and banana polenta, lemongrass tofu, peanut sauce
Our vegetable supplies are getting low - the first CSA since before Christmas is due tomorrow. This was a low-veg-supply dinner that was really rather good (and very quick!).
For the tofu:
1 block super firm tofu
~4 tbsp grapeseed oil
1 tsp sesame oil
~2-3 tbsp chopped lemongrass
salt+pepper
For the polenta:
(pretty similar to this recipe; note I haven't completely settled on the right amount of liquid vs polenta)
1 1/2 cups coconut milk
1 1/2 cups water
1 cup polenta
1 tsp salt
~2 tbsp chopped coriander
1 banana, peeled and diced
For the peanut sauce:
1-2 tbsp peanut butter
juice of 1 lime
~2 tbsp soy sauce
Cut the tofu into cuboids ~ 6 x 2 x 2 cm and dry. Heat the oils in a frying pan and plonk the pieces of tofu in it. Cook each side for a few minutes, flipping along the long axis using a fork. When nicely browned on all sides add the lemongrass and stir-fry for a few more minutes until the lemongrass is lightly browned and crispy. Season with salt and pepper.
Meanwhile, heat the coconut milk and the water in a small saucepan. Mix the polenta and salt in a bowl. When the liquid is boiling whisk in the polenta mixture a little at a time. It will probably become thick and seem cooked almost immediately. Stir in the coriander and banana, cover, cook for a minute and then turn off the heat and let it sit and steam a little.
To make the peanut sauce mix peanut butter, lime juice and soy sauce and taste to check balance. Add some chilli sauce, maple syrup or finely chopped fresh ginger if you like.
Serve the tofu over the top of the polenta, with peanut sauce over the top or on the side.
All very simple and good, making the best of the contents of fridge, freezer and storecupboard.
For the tofu:
1 block super firm tofu
~4 tbsp grapeseed oil
1 tsp sesame oil
~2-3 tbsp chopped lemongrass
salt+pepper
For the polenta:
(pretty similar to this recipe; note I haven't completely settled on the right amount of liquid vs polenta)
1 1/2 cups coconut milk
1 1/2 cups water
1 cup polenta
1 tsp salt
~2 tbsp chopped coriander
1 banana, peeled and diced
For the peanut sauce:
1-2 tbsp peanut butter
juice of 1 lime
~2 tbsp soy sauce
Cut the tofu into cuboids ~ 6 x 2 x 2 cm and dry. Heat the oils in a frying pan and plonk the pieces of tofu in it. Cook each side for a few minutes, flipping along the long axis using a fork. When nicely browned on all sides add the lemongrass and stir-fry for a few more minutes until the lemongrass is lightly browned and crispy. Season with salt and pepper.
Meanwhile, heat the coconut milk and the water in a small saucepan. Mix the polenta and salt in a bowl. When the liquid is boiling whisk in the polenta mixture a little at a time. It will probably become thick and seem cooked almost immediately. Stir in the coriander and banana, cover, cook for a minute and then turn off the heat and let it sit and steam a little.
To make the peanut sauce mix peanut butter, lime juice and soy sauce and taste to check balance. Add some chilli sauce, maple syrup or finely chopped fresh ginger if you like.
Serve the tofu over the top of the polenta, with peanut sauce over the top or on the side.
All very simple and good, making the best of the contents of fridge, freezer and storecupboard.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Aromatic coconut and udon soup
S has rediscovered udon noodles in a big way - currently, they are (almost, besides gorgonzola pasta) his favourite thing. Times have changed from when he bought a packet and they lay unused for almost a year... Last night I was heading home before him and asked for dinner suggestions. He said udon (naturally), and followed up with coconut (inspired, I think, by a soup we had at the Thai place at the end of our road the other night). I started thinking about all the lovely aromatics we had squirreled in the freezer (lemongrass, galangal, ginger...) and the tin of coconut milk I had left over from my abandoned kefir experiments, and realised it was a brilliant idea!
1 star anise
~2 tbsp chopped lemongrass
2 inch piece galangal, peeled and sliced
2 inch piece ginger, peeled and chopped into matchsticks
2 dried red chillies
1-2 lime leaves (optional)
good handful of fresh coriander, chopped (stalky parts and leafy parts separated)
1 tin coconut milk
~1-2 tbsp light soy sauce
juice of 1 lime
water
hot chilli sauce
2 (single serving) packets of udon
1 small onion, peeled and sliced lengthways into bitesize pieces
2 medium carrots, peeled and sliced into coins
1/2 a pack of extra firm tofu, drained and chopped into ~2 x 2 x 1 cm chunks
3 large-ish button mushrooms, trimmed and chopped into sixths lengthwise
3 smallish tomatoes, cut into sixths (or use cherry tomatoes)
Put the star anise, lemongrass, galangal, ginger, dried chillies, lime leaves (if using) and the stalky bits of coriander into a saucepan and add the coconut milk, soy sauce, and lime juice. Add ~1-2 cups of water and bring gently to a simmer. Taste for saltiness, acid, thickness/intensity of coconut milk, and add more soy sauce, lime juice or boiling water accordingly. Put in the udon, onion, carrots and tofu and bring back up to a simmer. Turn off and let sit for 10 minutes or so before checking the flavour balance again. Adjust as before, also add a few drops of hot sauce if you think it needs to be spicier. A few minutes before serving, add the mushrooms, tomatoes, and the leafy parts of the coriander. Bring back up to simmering point, check all the vegetables and the udon are cooked, turn off the heat and serve the soup. Avoid eating the star anise, the big pieces of galangal, and the dried chillies.
Really good. Quick (veg preparation the most time consuming step), and super easy / minimal washing up - just one board, one knife and one big pan (besides bowls and spoon+forks). Most of the stuff is either always in the storecupboard or basic veg and herbs. Veg could be varied (brassicas nice); as could noodles / it could be served with rice on the side instead. Lovely, warming, filling, aromatic and comforting for a cold, cold, end-of-year day.
1 star anise
~2 tbsp chopped lemongrass
2 inch piece galangal, peeled and sliced
2 inch piece ginger, peeled and chopped into matchsticks
2 dried red chillies
1-2 lime leaves (optional)
good handful of fresh coriander, chopped (stalky parts and leafy parts separated)
1 tin coconut milk
~1-2 tbsp light soy sauce
juice of 1 lime
water
hot chilli sauce
2 (single serving) packets of udon
1 small onion, peeled and sliced lengthways into bitesize pieces
2 medium carrots, peeled and sliced into coins
1/2 a pack of extra firm tofu, drained and chopped into ~2 x 2 x 1 cm chunks
3 large-ish button mushrooms, trimmed and chopped into sixths lengthwise
3 smallish tomatoes, cut into sixths (or use cherry tomatoes)
Put the star anise, lemongrass, galangal, ginger, dried chillies, lime leaves (if using) and the stalky bits of coriander into a saucepan and add the coconut milk, soy sauce, and lime juice. Add ~1-2 cups of water and bring gently to a simmer. Taste for saltiness, acid, thickness/intensity of coconut milk, and add more soy sauce, lime juice or boiling water accordingly. Put in the udon, onion, carrots and tofu and bring back up to a simmer. Turn off and let sit for 10 minutes or so before checking the flavour balance again. Adjust as before, also add a few drops of hot sauce if you think it needs to be spicier. A few minutes before serving, add the mushrooms, tomatoes, and the leafy parts of the coriander. Bring back up to simmering point, check all the vegetables and the udon are cooked, turn off the heat and serve the soup. Avoid eating the star anise, the big pieces of galangal, and the dried chillies.
Really good. Quick (veg preparation the most time consuming step), and super easy / minimal washing up - just one board, one knife and one big pan (besides bowls and spoon+forks). Most of the stuff is either always in the storecupboard or basic veg and herbs. Veg could be varied (brassicas nice); as could noodles / it could be served with rice on the side instead. Lovely, warming, filling, aromatic and comforting for a cold, cold, end-of-year day.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Japanese chestnut rice (kurigohan)
We had one bag of chestnuts already. I cut crosses in them and roasted them. They were good, but also injurious. Bravely / foolishly S bought a second bag of chestnuts, and I prepared them.
I was at D+K's place right before prepping the first bag, and they also had some chestnuts. K was soaking them, which I'd never seen before. She's Japanese, so I wondered if it might have to do with some Japanese preparation... I stumbled across Kurigohan (Japanese chestnut rice) - basically just Japanese rice cooked with chestnuts - and figured since it was so simple it had to be amazing. Also, the soaking might help alleviate injury risk since the shells would be softened and perhaps easier to cut into? I used this recipe.
~20 medium chestnuts*
2 1/4 cups sushi rice
1 tsp soy sauce
1 tbsp mirin
1 tbsp sake (a gift from KC after my aerial performance - s+i drank the rest and it was truly delicious)
1 tsp salt
1 piece konbu (used half a sheet of sushi seaweed as that's what we had)
2 2/3 cups water
black sesame seeds
chopped spring onion greens
Soak the whole chestnuts in boiling water for about 30 min.
Meanwhile, rinse the rice and then soak it (separately) in cold water for 30 min.
When the chestnuts have soaked, remove them from the hot water one by one, score the shells and remove them. Take care to remove the whole of the inner shell layer even though it is tricky - it is bitter. If it doesn't come off easily put the chestnut (minus outer shell) back in the hot water for a few more minutes. When they are peeled put back in the hot water for a few minutes. Don't expect to complete this step quickly - it is slow and fiddly.
When the chestnuts are all peeled, rinse them and rinse the soaked rice and put the rice in a large saucepan. Add the water, soy sauce, mirin, sake and salt and mix. Put the chestnuts on top, then lay the seaweed on top of them, cover and simmer gently for 20-30 min, until the liquid is all absorbed and the rice is tender. Turn off the heat and leave, covered, to steam for ~10 min. To serve, sprinkle individual servings with black sesame seeds and chopped spring onion greens (if you want).
Note: We have figured out a more weeknight-ready version. For this, roast the chestnuts whenever you have the oven on, peel and keep in the fridge til you want to make the rice. Dispense with all the soaking. When ready to make, put rice, soy, mirin, sake (or more mirin), salt and water in a pan and mix; crumble chestnuts on top and lay seaweed on top of that. Cook as above (perhaps a little longer).
This is amazing. The rice acts as a vehicle to extend the wonderful sweet/nutty chestnut flavour, and the textures of the two together are really comforting and more-ish. The recipe made quite a lot but S loved it so that is not a problem... Note, the chestnuts tended to break up when I mixed it all together in the end, which I think is good as means better distribution of chestnut pieces - so it really doesn't matter if they break when peeling.
*I suspect the original uses Asian chestnuts, due to its origin... Apparently there are Asian, European and American chestnut varieties, and although all quite similar they are different. And the American chestnut is almost extinct due to a disease it caught from the Asian one (in Brookline?!). So these were probably 0European, possibly Asian. I need to corroborate all of this!
I was at D+K's place right before prepping the first bag, and they also had some chestnuts. K was soaking them, which I'd never seen before. She's Japanese, so I wondered if it might have to do with some Japanese preparation... I stumbled across Kurigohan (Japanese chestnut rice) - basically just Japanese rice cooked with chestnuts - and figured since it was so simple it had to be amazing. Also, the soaking might help alleviate injury risk since the shells would be softened and perhaps easier to cut into? I used this recipe.
~20 medium chestnuts*
2 1/4 cups sushi rice
1 tsp soy sauce
1 tbsp mirin
1 tbsp sake (a gift from KC after my aerial performance - s+i drank the rest and it was truly delicious)
1 tsp salt
1 piece konbu (used half a sheet of sushi seaweed as that's what we had)
2 2/3 cups water
black sesame seeds
chopped spring onion greens
Soak the whole chestnuts in boiling water for about 30 min.
Meanwhile, rinse the rice and then soak it (separately) in cold water for 30 min.
When the chestnuts have soaked, remove them from the hot water one by one, score the shells and remove them. Take care to remove the whole of the inner shell layer even though it is tricky - it is bitter. If it doesn't come off easily put the chestnut (minus outer shell) back in the hot water for a few more minutes. When they are peeled put back in the hot water for a few minutes. Don't expect to complete this step quickly - it is slow and fiddly.
When the chestnuts are all peeled, rinse them and rinse the soaked rice and put the rice in a large saucepan. Add the water, soy sauce, mirin, sake and salt and mix. Put the chestnuts on top, then lay the seaweed on top of them, cover and simmer gently for 20-30 min, until the liquid is all absorbed and the rice is tender. Turn off the heat and leave, covered, to steam for ~10 min. To serve, sprinkle individual servings with black sesame seeds and chopped spring onion greens (if you want).
Note: We have figured out a more weeknight-ready version. For this, roast the chestnuts whenever you have the oven on, peel and keep in the fridge til you want to make the rice. Dispense with all the soaking. When ready to make, put rice, soy, mirin, sake (or more mirin), salt and water in a pan and mix; crumble chestnuts on top and lay seaweed on top of that. Cook as above (perhaps a little longer).
This is amazing. The rice acts as a vehicle to extend the wonderful sweet/nutty chestnut flavour, and the textures of the two together are really comforting and more-ish. The recipe made quite a lot but S loved it so that is not a problem... Note, the chestnuts tended to break up when I mixed it all together in the end, which I think is good as means better distribution of chestnut pieces - so it really doesn't matter if they break when peeling.
*I suspect the original uses Asian chestnuts, due to its origin... Apparently there are Asian, European and American chestnut varieties, and although all quite similar they are different. And the American chestnut is almost extinct due to a disease it caught from the Asian one (in Brookline?!). So these were probably 0European, possibly Asian. I need to corroborate all of this!
Friday, October 11, 2013
Maitake, the Dancing Mushroom
In August, I dreamed about Black Trumpets and how much I wanted to try them. And, lo and behold, that very day C rang to see if we wanted to share in a fantastic haul of those very same shrooms. So lucky! Come October maitake (hen of the woods) was my dream. Lucky again: this time it is D whose generosity lets it be reality. Maitake is a beautiful mushroom, inside and out. I may have to revise my favourite mushroom rankings...
I was thinking of just sauteeing the mushroom with a little garlic, but I fancied eating it with bok choi... and miso... and egg... and the next thing I knew all those things (and a few more besides) were in one pan making party. Maitake is fairly substantial in volume, taste and texture, so I figured it should stand up to some light flavour addition - I wouldn't consider any of these additions to be too overpowering (in the quantities used).
1-2 tbsp veg oil
1 large clove garlic, peeled and finely chopped
1 piece ginger same size as the garlic, peeled and finely chopped
1/2 tsp red chilli flakes
~2 cupfuls cleaned maitake, torn into equal-sized pieces about 1 in x 3 in
1 tbsp sesame seeds
1 egg, beaten (optional)
1 bunch small bok choi, washed and cut into pieces similar sized to the maitake
1/2 cup frozen sweetcorn, defrosted
1 tbsp white miso
1 tsp maple syrup
1 tsp soy sauce
1-2 tbsp lime juice
1-2 tbsp fresh coriander, chopped (optional)
Heat the oil and add the garlic and ginger. Cook for a minute or two then add the chilli flakes. Stir, then add the maitake. Saute for 10-15 min, until it has released liquid and taken it up again, shrunk, and is lightly browned. Add the sesame seeds and cook for a minute or two til just starting to brown. Make space in the pan then add the beaten egg. Let it cook into a mini omelette in the middle then slice roughly with your spoon and mix in lightly. Add the bok choi and sweetcorn and cook until the bok choi just wilts. Mix the miso, maple syrup, soy sauce and lime juice in a small bowl, then add to the pan, turn off heat and mix to combine. Serve with a sprinkling of coriander. Good with noodles or rice or wheatberries (the last being what I had kicking around in the fridge).
For notes on drying and rehydrating maitake, see here.
I was thinking of just sauteeing the mushroom with a little garlic, but I fancied eating it with bok choi... and miso... and egg... and the next thing I knew all those things (and a few more besides) were in one pan making party. Maitake is fairly substantial in volume, taste and texture, so I figured it should stand up to some light flavour addition - I wouldn't consider any of these additions to be too overpowering (in the quantities used).
1-2 tbsp veg oil
1 large clove garlic, peeled and finely chopped
1 piece ginger same size as the garlic, peeled and finely chopped
1/2 tsp red chilli flakes
~2 cupfuls cleaned maitake, torn into equal-sized pieces about 1 in x 3 in
1 tbsp sesame seeds
1 egg, beaten (optional)
1 bunch small bok choi, washed and cut into pieces similar sized to the maitake
1/2 cup frozen sweetcorn, defrosted
1 tbsp white miso
1 tsp maple syrup
1 tsp soy sauce
1-2 tbsp lime juice
1-2 tbsp fresh coriander, chopped (optional)
Heat the oil and add the garlic and ginger. Cook for a minute or two then add the chilli flakes. Stir, then add the maitake. Saute for 10-15 min, until it has released liquid and taken it up again, shrunk, and is lightly browned. Add the sesame seeds and cook for a minute or two til just starting to brown. Make space in the pan then add the beaten egg. Let it cook into a mini omelette in the middle then slice roughly with your spoon and mix in lightly. Add the bok choi and sweetcorn and cook until the bok choi just wilts. Mix the miso, maple syrup, soy sauce and lime juice in a small bowl, then add to the pan, turn off heat and mix to combine. Serve with a sprinkling of coriander. Good with noodles or rice or wheatberries (the last being what I had kicking around in the fridge).
For notes on drying and rehydrating maitake, see here.
Friday, September 13, 2013
Kohlrabi and apple salsa-salad
Not sure if 'salsa' is the best description for this - perhaps it's more like a finely-diced salad. Either way, the idea is that it can easily be scooped up with tortilla chips or bits of bell pepper. It is for our lab happy hour (apple themed), and I thought of making it after the success of this mango and sweetcorn salsa.
I used kohlrabi because we had some in the fridge and it seemed like it would go well with apple. Think jicama would also be good - similar crispy freshness.
1 medium kohlrabi, peeled and finely chopped
2 tart, medium-sized apples (Granny Smith or similar), peeled and finely chopped
juice of 1 lime
1 tbsp nasturtium seeds, finely chopped*
~2 tbsp chopped fresh coriander
1/2 tsp sesame oil
1/2 tsp freshly ground white pepper
1 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp light soy sauce
salt to taste
Prepare the apple and kohlrabi and toss with the lime juice immediately to prevent the apple from browning. Add the remaining ingredients and taste for seasoning. Refrigerate until needed.
*I might have used some finely chopped green chilli and / or finely chopped root ginger as well / instead.
I used kohlrabi because we had some in the fridge and it seemed like it would go well with apple. Think jicama would also be good - similar crispy freshness.
1 medium kohlrabi, peeled and finely chopped
2 tart, medium-sized apples (Granny Smith or similar), peeled and finely chopped
juice of 1 lime
1 tbsp nasturtium seeds, finely chopped*
~2 tbsp chopped fresh coriander
1/2 tsp sesame oil
1/2 tsp freshly ground white pepper
1 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp light soy sauce
salt to taste
Prepare the apple and kohlrabi and toss with the lime juice immediately to prevent the apple from browning. Add the remaining ingredients and taste for seasoning. Refrigerate until needed.
*I might have used some finely chopped green chilli and / or finely chopped root ginger as well / instead.
Labels:
apple,
coriander,
dip,
ginger,
jicama,
kohlrabi,
lime,
nasturtium,
sesame oil,
soy sauce,
white pepper
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Purple noodles with purple carrots and chickpeas
1 pack of purple yam noodles (thickness of spaghetti)
1 bunch purple carrots, scrubbed, trimmed and roughly chopped
2 purple spring onions, cleaned, trimmed and chopped
1 thumb-sized piece of ginger, peeled and finely chopped
1-2 tbsp tahini
2 tsp honey
2 tsp soy sauce
1 tsp mirin
1 tbsp rice vinegar
2 tsp sesame oil
3/4 cup chickpeas, defrosted and mashed roughly with a fork
1/2 an avocado, peeled and roughly chopped 1-2 tbsp sesame seeds, toasted
1-2 tbsp fresh coriander, chopped
Put the carrots on to steam until just done. Refresh in cold water immediately. Put the purple noodles in a pan of boiling, slightly salted water and cook until just tender, about 10-15 min. Run under cold tap to stop cooking. Put the spring onion, ginger, tahini, honey, soy, mirin, vinegar and sesame oil in a serving bowl and mix together to make the dressing. Add the noodles and toss to coat. Add the mashed chickpeas, steamed carrots, chopped avocado, coriander and toasted sesame seeds, toss, taste for seasoning and eat.
I like the coriander, avocado, sesame, carrots and chickpeas together, and the noodles, but the dressing is not quite right - it needs to be brighter and cleaner, and the tahini creaminess is wrong here. Still, all the purple stuff is awesome.
1 bunch purple carrots, scrubbed, trimmed and roughly chopped
2 purple spring onions, cleaned, trimmed and chopped
1 thumb-sized piece of ginger, peeled and finely chopped
1-2 tbsp tahini
2 tsp honey
2 tsp soy sauce
1 tsp mirin
1 tbsp rice vinegar
2 tsp sesame oil
3/4 cup chickpeas, defrosted and mashed roughly with a fork
1/2 an avocado, peeled and roughly chopped 1-2 tbsp sesame seeds, toasted
1-2 tbsp fresh coriander, chopped
Put the carrots on to steam until just done. Refresh in cold water immediately. Put the purple noodles in a pan of boiling, slightly salted water and cook until just tender, about 10-15 min. Run under cold tap to stop cooking. Put the spring onion, ginger, tahini, honey, soy, mirin, vinegar and sesame oil in a serving bowl and mix together to make the dressing. Add the noodles and toss to coat. Add the mashed chickpeas, steamed carrots, chopped avocado, coriander and toasted sesame seeds, toss, taste for seasoning and eat.
I like the coriander, avocado, sesame, carrots and chickpeas together, and the noodles, but the dressing is not quite right - it needs to be brighter and cleaner, and the tahini creaminess is wrong here. Still, all the purple stuff is awesome.
Saturday, July 6, 2013
Carrot greens are weirdly good: limey, spicy carrot green paste
I seem to be on a strange kick of eating things I never realised could be eaten - radish greens, banana skins, now carrot greens. We had our first bunch of fresh, new-season carrots today, with resplendent, fern-like greens. As soon as I saw the greens waving at me over the side of the CSA box I wanted to do something with them. Some kind of pesto was my first thought, following the radish green pesto's success. But with it being so hot and intense I kind of fancied something fresher, with more of a kick. Then I met this recipe and it seemed to be exactly what I was thinking of, especially since we had a bunch of coriander and some nice garlic scapes in that CSA box too.
Greens from 1 bunch of carrots
small bunch of coriander
2 good-sized garlic scapes, roughly chopped*
juice of 1 lime
1 green chilli, trimmed, deseeded and chopped in two
2-3 tbsp walnut oil
1 tsp soy sauce
1/4 tsp sea salt
Wash the carrot greens and pluck all the little frondy bits, discarding the stems as they are too fibrous for this. Pack the fronds into a blender cup, along with the coriander leaves, garlic scapes, lime juice, chilli, walnut oil and soy sauce. Blend until fairly smooth. Do your best to blend quite thoroughly, as the fibrous greens take a bit of breaking down. Add salt to taste.
This, like the brown pasta, was weirdly good. Seriously. Although there was a bit of a fibrous clout coming from the carrot greens, the taste was spot on: the greens had an interesting carroty taste while also coming through as green and herby, and with the lime and slight chilli kick it was really fresh and tasty. And beautifully green to look at. Could imagine eating it on just about anything. We started by mixing some into the brown pasta with peas and tempeh we made at the same time, and that was excellent.
*use a smaller quantity of regular garlic if scapes aren't around.
Greens from 1 bunch of carrots
small bunch of coriander
2 good-sized garlic scapes, roughly chopped*
juice of 1 lime
1 green chilli, trimmed, deseeded and chopped in two
2-3 tbsp walnut oil
1 tsp soy sauce
1/4 tsp sea salt
Wash the carrot greens and pluck all the little frondy bits, discarding the stems as they are too fibrous for this. Pack the fronds into a blender cup, along with the coriander leaves, garlic scapes, lime juice, chilli, walnut oil and soy sauce. Blend until fairly smooth. Do your best to blend quite thoroughly, as the fibrous greens take a bit of breaking down. Add salt to taste.
This, like the brown pasta, was weirdly good. Seriously. Although there was a bit of a fibrous clout coming from the carrot greens, the taste was spot on: the greens had an interesting carroty taste while also coming through as green and herby, and with the lime and slight chilli kick it was really fresh and tasty. And beautifully green to look at. Could imagine eating it on just about anything. We started by mixing some into the brown pasta with peas and tempeh we made at the same time, and that was excellent.
*use a smaller quantity of regular garlic if scapes aren't around.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Mushrooms and sesame tofu
We tried sesame tofu for the first time at Journeyman (our new favourite fancy Greater Boston restaurant). I am not sure if their sesame tofu is quite the same stuff, but I found three different types of gomadofu (Japanese sesame 'tofu') at Ebisuya. The Japanese sesame tofu turns out to be tofu in name and consistency only: it is not made by coagulation of 'milk'; rather by making sesame paste set into a tofu-like block using kudzu starch. So it is basically jellified tahini. I really like it: it has that earthy, tahini taste in a smooth, refreshing, tofu-like texture. We tried black and beige versions.
First we ate some simply: in small cubes with a smear of wasabi on top / in a puddle of good-quality soy sauce, as a side with sushi. And it was good.
Last night I was making spätzle (with the last two wonderful eggs from S's chickens in Roslindale), and decided it would go well with mushrooms and sesame tofu. It did, it went great.
(serves two, in combination with one quantity of spätzle)
1 tbsp olive oil
3 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
~12 mushrooms, cleaned and chopped into ~7mm dice
1 tbsp chanterelle powder
1 tsp mediterranean herb mix (mostly thyme+oregano)
1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
1 tsp mushroom soy sauce
1 tbsp mirin
salt+pepper
1 small block of beige sesame tofu, coarsely grated
toasted sesame seeds (optional)
Heat the oil in a frying pan. Add garlic and fry for a few minutes until softened. Add the diced mushrooms, chanterelle powder, nutmeg and herb mix and fry until the mushrooms have released their liquid and then reabsorbed most of it. Add the soy sauce and mirin and fry for a minute or so longer until everything melds. Taste for seasoning and add salt+pepper to taste. To serve, put some spätzle into an individual bowl, add mushrooms, and then sprinkle with grated sesame tofu and sesame seeds (if using).
This would also work with fresh pasta or gnocchi (although I do like the egginess of spätzle with the mushrooms and sesame tofu).
First we ate some simply: in small cubes with a smear of wasabi on top / in a puddle of good-quality soy sauce, as a side with sushi. And it was good.
Last night I was making spätzle (with the last two wonderful eggs from S's chickens in Roslindale), and decided it would go well with mushrooms and sesame tofu. It did, it went great.
(serves two, in combination with one quantity of spätzle)
1 tbsp olive oil
3 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
~12 mushrooms, cleaned and chopped into ~7mm dice
1 tbsp chanterelle powder
1 tsp mediterranean herb mix (mostly thyme+oregano)
1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
1 tsp mushroom soy sauce
1 tbsp mirin
salt+pepper
1 small block of beige sesame tofu, coarsely grated
toasted sesame seeds (optional)
Heat the oil in a frying pan. Add garlic and fry for a few minutes until softened. Add the diced mushrooms, chanterelle powder, nutmeg and herb mix and fry until the mushrooms have released their liquid and then reabsorbed most of it. Add the soy sauce and mirin and fry for a minute or so longer until everything melds. Taste for seasoning and add salt+pepper to taste. To serve, put some spätzle into an individual bowl, add mushrooms, and then sprinkle with grated sesame tofu and sesame seeds (if using).
This would also work with fresh pasta or gnocchi (although I do like the egginess of spätzle with the mushrooms and sesame tofu).
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Chinese Spring Festival meets Pancake Day: Scallion Pancakes
With all the snow and the pre-Valentines baking I got distracted from the fact it was Chinese New Year at the weekend: happy new Year of the Snake!
And then Pancake Day was already upon us (yesterday), demanding a pancake feast... Scallion pancakes seemed to be the perfect way to celebrate both at once, in food form (of course... both celebrations seem to be mainly about food, perhaps that's why I like them so much...).
I mainly referred to this recipe, also this one.
(makes 4 fairly large pancakes)
For pancakes:
2 cups plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 cup boiling water
1/2 cup scallions (aka spring onions aka green onions - about 4), sliced
1/2 cup veg oil mixed with 1 tbsp sesame oil
salt+white pepper
For dipping sauce:
1/4 cup light soy sauce
1/4 cup rice vinegar
1/4 cup sliced scallions (about 2)
1 tsp red chilli flakes
1 tsp chopped root ginger
1 tsp sugar
Mix flour and baking powder together in a bowl with a fork. Dribble in the boiling water gradually and steadily, mixing with a wooden spoon the whole time. Bring together into a ball of dough and then let rest (covered with a damp cloth) for 30 min or so.
While the dough rests, chop the scallions and prepare the dipping sauce by mixing all the ingredients together in a small bowl.
To make the pancakes, roll the dough out on a floured surface into a large rectangle about 8 mm thick. Brush the rectangle with the oil mixture, sprinkle the chopped scallions all over, then season with salt and ground white pepper. Next, carefully roll the rectangle up as if rolling up a swiss roll, going from a long side, so you end up with a long sausage shape. Cut the sausage into four. Take one piece, pull it out and squish it a little, twist it three times, then wrap it round into a flattened spiral. Roll it out into a thick (~8 mm thick), round pancake, about 5-6 inches diameter. Repeat with the other three pieces.
Heat any remaining oil mixture (or additional veg oil) in a frying pan. When hot, place a pancake in it and cook on one side until browned, then flip and brown the other side. Eat hot, cut into wedges and dipped in the dipping sauce.
Wow. These were quite delicious. I probably won't get around to making them again til some Pancake Day in the distant future, but damn they were good. The dipping sauce was a great idea: its spicy / salty / sour / sweet ness really cut through the greasy, stodgy (in a good way) pancake beautifully. Despite the large quantity of scallions used, there was no lingering onion taste.
And then Pancake Day was already upon us (yesterday), demanding a pancake feast... Scallion pancakes seemed to be the perfect way to celebrate both at once, in food form (of course... both celebrations seem to be mainly about food, perhaps that's why I like them so much...).
I mainly referred to this recipe, also this one.
(makes 4 fairly large pancakes)
For pancakes:
2 cups plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 cup boiling water
1/2 cup scallions (aka spring onions aka green onions - about 4), sliced
1/2 cup veg oil mixed with 1 tbsp sesame oil
salt+white pepper
For dipping sauce:
1/4 cup light soy sauce
1/4 cup rice vinegar
1/4 cup sliced scallions (about 2)
1 tsp red chilli flakes
1 tsp chopped root ginger
1 tsp sugar
Mix flour and baking powder together in a bowl with a fork. Dribble in the boiling water gradually and steadily, mixing with a wooden spoon the whole time. Bring together into a ball of dough and then let rest (covered with a damp cloth) for 30 min or so.
While the dough rests, chop the scallions and prepare the dipping sauce by mixing all the ingredients together in a small bowl.
To make the pancakes, roll the dough out on a floured surface into a large rectangle about 8 mm thick. Brush the rectangle with the oil mixture, sprinkle the chopped scallions all over, then season with salt and ground white pepper. Next, carefully roll the rectangle up as if rolling up a swiss roll, going from a long side, so you end up with a long sausage shape. Cut the sausage into four. Take one piece, pull it out and squish it a little, twist it three times, then wrap it round into a flattened spiral. Roll it out into a thick (~8 mm thick), round pancake, about 5-6 inches diameter. Repeat with the other three pieces.
Heat any remaining oil mixture (or additional veg oil) in a frying pan. When hot, place a pancake in it and cook on one side until browned, then flip and brown the other side. Eat hot, cut into wedges and dipped in the dipping sauce.
Wow. These were quite delicious. I probably won't get around to making them again til some Pancake Day in the distant future, but damn they were good. The dipping sauce was a great idea: its spicy / salty / sour / sweet ness really cut through the greasy, stodgy (in a good way) pancake beautifully. Despite the large quantity of scallions used, there was no lingering onion taste.
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Beetroot soup
We had a lot of beetroot, thanks to A. They were a different variety than the last lot: the shape was longer and the colour lighter. After the watermelon radish I half expected to cut into them to find something surprising (Chioggia?), but they were just plain old beets. Not that I am complaining, I love the good old deep pink ones the best. I have been reminding myself to save some for something Valentines pink, and made some into dip at the weekend, but most of the rest became soup last night, in a flurry of slow-cooked comfort food making that also featured mixed grains and sweet and sour red lentils. It's not incredibly cold any more (back up to -3C), but the constant chilliness is starting to drag a little, despite it no longer being January and it almost being still light at 5pm...
S suggested Borscht at the weekend, so I wanted to do something a bit like a borscht. I knew most were with meat, didn't know that most also contain cabbage, carrots etc. Fancied something a little simpler and totally beetroot-focused, and came across this recipe - based it on that.
2 tbsp olive oil
3/4 tsp caraway seeds
3/4 tsp brown mustard seeds
3/4 tsp cumin seeds
2 small onions, peeled and chopped
1 lb fresh beetroot, peeled and grated
1-2 bay leaves
4 cups veg stock
1 1/2 tbsp cider vinegar
1 tsp dark soy sauce
salt+pepper
horseradish to serve - or horseradish yoghurt (recommended! 4 tsp grated fresh horseradish mixed with 1/2 cup plain yoghurt)
Heat oil in a large saucepan with a lid. Add seeds and fry until fragrant and starting to pop (about a minute). Add onion, cover and cook til softened. Add beetroot, bay leaves and stock. Bring to the boil, cover and simmer for 20-30 minutes, until the vegetables are tender. Add vinegar, soy sauce and salt and pepper, taste and add a little more if needed. Serve hot, with a tsp or so of prepared horseradish from a jar swirled into the middle.
Something simple and earthy becomes something vibrant and wonderful with the addition of vinegar, caraway and horseradish - I can see why borscht is so popular and so divisive. Now I am daydreaming about more of this for dinner, this time with gnocchi cooked in it and chopped fresh coriander on top... And I did that, and it felt like the best idea for a quick, warming, light Winter supper. I should really make soup more often.
S suggested Borscht at the weekend, so I wanted to do something a bit like a borscht. I knew most were with meat, didn't know that most also contain cabbage, carrots etc. Fancied something a little simpler and totally beetroot-focused, and came across this recipe - based it on that.
2 tbsp olive oil
3/4 tsp caraway seeds
3/4 tsp brown mustard seeds
3/4 tsp cumin seeds
2 small onions, peeled and chopped
1 lb fresh beetroot, peeled and grated
1-2 bay leaves
4 cups veg stock
1 1/2 tbsp cider vinegar
1 tsp dark soy sauce
salt+pepper
horseradish to serve - or horseradish yoghurt (recommended! 4 tsp grated fresh horseradish mixed with 1/2 cup plain yoghurt)
Heat oil in a large saucepan with a lid. Add seeds and fry until fragrant and starting to pop (about a minute). Add onion, cover and cook til softened. Add beetroot, bay leaves and stock. Bring to the boil, cover and simmer for 20-30 minutes, until the vegetables are tender. Add vinegar, soy sauce and salt and pepper, taste and add a little more if needed. Serve hot, with a tsp or so of prepared horseradish from a jar swirled into the middle.
Something simple and earthy becomes something vibrant and wonderful with the addition of vinegar, caraway and horseradish - I can see why borscht is so popular and so divisive. Now I am daydreaming about more of this for dinner, this time with gnocchi cooked in it and chopped fresh coriander on top... And I did that, and it felt like the best idea for a quick, warming, light Winter supper. I should really make soup more often.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Thai green curry with plantain, chickpeas and cauliflower
I have been ferreting through the freezer, trying to figure out why it is so full and disorganised (probably a clue is its bad design... at least, S pointed out, it being really full means it is more energy efficient!), and what treasures might be lurking at the back...
Among other things, I discovered galangal, lemongrass, and half a bag of frozen peas. And, possibly due to an exciting visit to Jitlada Thai in Hollywood, wondered if maybe I should make a Thai curry?
This recipe looked like the business. Amazingly, I actually had most of the key ingredients for the paste (or reasonable substitutions). I didn't have any of the recommended veg to go in it, but decided to freestyle with what I had - no way was I going out to buy food last night - it hit -12C and my fingers froze on the bike ride home in spite of double, super thick gloves.
Green Curry Paste:
1 stalk fresh lemongrass, sliced finely and minced OR 3 tbsp frozen or bottled lemongrass
2 tsp ground coriander
1/2 tsp ground cumin
2+1/2 tbsp soy sauce, OR equal parts Thai Golden Mountain Sauce and soy sauce, leave out the dark soy
1-2 tsp brown sugar (to taste)
1-3 green chillies, minced (to taste) (used 1-2 tsp dried red chilli as we didn't have any green)
1 small onion
3 cloves garlic
1 thumb-size piece galangal OR ginger, peeled and sliced
2 kaffir lime leaves (fresh or frozen), snipped into thin strips with scissors, OR substitute 1 tbsp fresh lime juice
1 loose cup chopped fresh coriander leaves and stems
1/4 cup fresh basil
1 tsp dark soy sauce, OR substitute 1 more tbsp regular soy sauce
Other:
2 kaffir lime leaves, OR substitute 1 bay leaf
1 tin coconut milk
1 1/2 cup cooked chickpeas OR 1 1/2 cup firm tofu drained and chopped into cubes OR a combination
1 black plantain, peeled and chopped into chunks
~3 medium carrots peeled and sliced
~10 mushrooms, roughly chopped into quarters
~1 cup of cauliflower chunks about an inch diameter
3/4 cup frozen peas
1/2 cup fresh basil, roughly chopped (optional)
2-3 tbsp oil for frying
To make the green curry paste, place all paste ingredients in a blender. Add a few tbsp of the coconut milk, enough to blend ingredients. Process well.
Place oil in deep frying pan. Turn heat on medium-high and add paste. Stir-fry until fragrant (about 1 minute), then add the coconut milk. Add tofu and / or chickpeas and stir to combine.
Add lime leaves (used bay) and reduce heat to medium-low. Cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, for about 5 minutes.
Add plantain and carrots. (Note: if more sauce is desired, add up to 1 cup vegetable stock.) Cover and simmer another 5 min, then add the cauliflower. Simmer for 3-5 min more, until carrots are soft enough to pierce with a fork.
Finally, add mushrooms and frozen peas. Stir and continue cooking for 2-3 minutes, or until peas are cooked but still bright green.
Do a taste test for salt and spice, and add more soy sauce, salt, lime juice or coconut milk accordingly.
Vegetables: The recommended combo was 1 cubed sweet potato (added when I did the plantain and carrot), 1 red pepper, chunked and a cup of sugarsnap peas (both added when I did the mushrooms) - alternative recommendations were: broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, french beans, aubergine, squash, and courgette.
All in all this was really successful: the curry paste worked out well and tasted good and quite authentic. The colour of the curry paste was a bit off (kind of greenish, but also brownish): wondered if I might have skimped a little on the coriander by measuring it before chopping - another time measure after chopping and will probably end up with more. The basil was the tired stuff off our windowsill - fresh holy basil would probably have been much better (and greener).
The plantain, chickpeas and cauliflower all tasted great in this format - was especially pleased with the plantain and chickpeas together. However, they are all brownish and so are the mushrooms and tofu, so that didn't help with the colour issues! So, another time it would be cool to try and get hold of some kaffir lime leaves and holy basil, and some more colourful veg, but I was really impressed with this recipe as a quick, storecupboard-based weeknight supper.
It probably took about an hour in total - could have sped this up by cutting the carrot thinner, and also by prepping the cauli / mushrooms / peas while the pot is on (I was tired and thought it best to prep everything at the beginning to avoid getting confused / stressed). We ate it with simple coconut basmati rice (toss through a few tsp of coconut oil when the rice is cooked and steaming).
Edit: I made this again (after another freezer-clearance effort): this time used holy basil and lime leaves, and green chillies, and made sure my herbs were well-packed. And the paste came out deep green and wonderfully aromatic - I could eat it on its own. I used only one chilli - perhaps use more next time, it wasn't very spicy. For content, I used chickpeas, carrot, tempeh, baby turnips (roots and greens), courgette, peas, radish greens... turns out this is a good way to use random things up / most of the necessary items can be stored in the freezer or pantry indefinitely - only really need the fresh holy basil and coriander.
Among other things, I discovered galangal, lemongrass, and half a bag of frozen peas. And, possibly due to an exciting visit to Jitlada Thai in Hollywood, wondered if maybe I should make a Thai curry?
This recipe looked like the business. Amazingly, I actually had most of the key ingredients for the paste (or reasonable substitutions). I didn't have any of the recommended veg to go in it, but decided to freestyle with what I had - no way was I going out to buy food last night - it hit -12C and my fingers froze on the bike ride home in spite of double, super thick gloves.
Green Curry Paste:
1 stalk fresh lemongrass, sliced finely and minced OR 3 tbsp frozen or bottled lemongrass
2 tsp ground coriander
1/2 tsp ground cumin
2+1/2 tbsp soy sauce, OR equal parts Thai Golden Mountain Sauce and soy sauce, leave out the dark soy
1-2 tsp brown sugar (to taste)
1-3 green chillies, minced (to taste) (used 1-2 tsp dried red chilli as we didn't have any green)
1 small onion
3 cloves garlic
1 thumb-size piece galangal OR ginger, peeled and sliced
2 kaffir lime leaves (fresh or frozen), snipped into thin strips with scissors, OR substitute 1 tbsp fresh lime juice
1 loose cup chopped fresh coriander leaves and stems
1/4 cup fresh basil
1 tsp dark soy sauce, OR substitute 1 more tbsp regular soy sauce
Other:
2 kaffir lime leaves, OR substitute 1 bay leaf
1 tin coconut milk
1 1/2 cup cooked chickpeas OR 1 1/2 cup firm tofu drained and chopped into cubes OR a combination
1 black plantain, peeled and chopped into chunks
~3 medium carrots peeled and sliced
~10 mushrooms, roughly chopped into quarters
~1 cup of cauliflower chunks about an inch diameter
3/4 cup frozen peas
1/2 cup fresh basil, roughly chopped (optional)
2-3 tbsp oil for frying
To make the green curry paste, place all paste ingredients in a blender. Add a few tbsp of the coconut milk, enough to blend ingredients. Process well.
Place oil in deep frying pan. Turn heat on medium-high and add paste. Stir-fry until fragrant (about 1 minute), then add the coconut milk. Add tofu and / or chickpeas and stir to combine.
Add lime leaves (used bay) and reduce heat to medium-low. Cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, for about 5 minutes.
Add plantain and carrots. (Note: if more sauce is desired, add up to 1 cup vegetable stock.) Cover and simmer another 5 min, then add the cauliflower. Simmer for 3-5 min more, until carrots are soft enough to pierce with a fork.
Finally, add mushrooms and frozen peas. Stir and continue cooking for 2-3 minutes, or until peas are cooked but still bright green.
Do a taste test for salt and spice, and add more soy sauce, salt, lime juice or coconut milk accordingly.
Vegetables: The recommended combo was 1 cubed sweet potato (added when I did the plantain and carrot), 1 red pepper, chunked and a cup of sugarsnap peas (both added when I did the mushrooms) - alternative recommendations were: broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, french beans, aubergine, squash, and courgette.
All in all this was really successful: the curry paste worked out well and tasted good and quite authentic. The colour of the curry paste was a bit off (kind of greenish, but also brownish): wondered if I might have skimped a little on the coriander by measuring it before chopping - another time measure after chopping and will probably end up with more. The basil was the tired stuff off our windowsill - fresh holy basil would probably have been much better (and greener).
The plantain, chickpeas and cauliflower all tasted great in this format - was especially pleased with the plantain and chickpeas together. However, they are all brownish and so are the mushrooms and tofu, so that didn't help with the colour issues! So, another time it would be cool to try and get hold of some kaffir lime leaves and holy basil, and some more colourful veg, but I was really impressed with this recipe as a quick, storecupboard-based weeknight supper.
It probably took about an hour in total - could have sped this up by cutting the carrot thinner, and also by prepping the cauli / mushrooms / peas while the pot is on (I was tired and thought it best to prep everything at the beginning to avoid getting confused / stressed). We ate it with simple coconut basmati rice (toss through a few tsp of coconut oil when the rice is cooked and steaming).
Edit: I made this again (after another freezer-clearance effort): this time used holy basil and lime leaves, and green chillies, and made sure my herbs were well-packed. And the paste came out deep green and wonderfully aromatic - I could eat it on its own. I used only one chilli - perhaps use more next time, it wasn't very spicy. For content, I used chickpeas, carrot, tempeh, baby turnips (roots and greens), courgette, peas, radish greens... turns out this is a good way to use random things up / most of the necessary items can be stored in the freezer or pantry indefinitely - only really need the fresh holy basil and coriander.
Labels:
basil,
carrots,
cauliflower,
chickpea,
chilli,
coconut milk,
coriander,
cumin,
curry,
galangal,
ginger,
holy basil,
lemongrass,
lime,
lime leaves,
peas,
plantain,
soy sauce,
thai,
tofu
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Mum's 'Red Dragon' bean pie
This is sort of a veg shepherd's pie. Grandma looked out the recipe while I was in Edinburgh and made it for me. She had got the recipe from Mum. In fact, as she looked through her recipe folders she found that she had got the recipe from Mum twice: she had two different copies, both handwritten by Mum. Seeing Mum's handwriting is one of those things that makes her seem so near yet so far - I remember tearing out and keeping all these little bits of paper where she'd signed my schoolwork: I didn't want to forget what her writing looked like, same as I didn't want to forget anything else about her.
The pie was really tasty - a bit 70s perhaps, but lovely. Grandma gave me one copy of the recipe and I've brought it back with me: I made it for S today (with black eyed beans) and he liked it.
For filling:
4 oz aduki beans (or similar)
2 oz wheat grain or rice (used rice)
1 onion, chopped
8 oz grated carrot (used about 5 medium-small ones)
1-2 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp tomato puree
1 tsp mixed herbs (used mix of oregano, basil, thyme)
1/2 pint bean stock
salt+pepper
For topping:
~4 medium potatoes, peeled, boiled and mashed with
-marg, olive oil, fake milk, salt+pepper to taste
Soak the beans overnight, then cook. Cook the rice. Cook the potatoes separately, then mash with oil/marg, milk, salt+pepper (we used a mixture of potato and celeriac and it was yum).
Fry the onion and carrot. Add the rest of the filling ingredients to the onion and carrot and simmer until thickened.
Put the filling in an ovenproof dish, top with the mashed potato, and bake in a 400F oven for 20-30 min until the top of the mashed potato has started to brown and the filling is bubbling.
Note: I followed the recipe fairly approximately - used ingredients as above but just guessed quantities.
The pie was really tasty - a bit 70s perhaps, but lovely. Grandma gave me one copy of the recipe and I've brought it back with me: I made it for S today (with black eyed beans) and he liked it.
For filling:
4 oz aduki beans (or similar)
2 oz wheat grain or rice (used rice)
1 onion, chopped
8 oz grated carrot (used about 5 medium-small ones)
1-2 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp tomato puree
1 tsp mixed herbs (used mix of oregano, basil, thyme)
1/2 pint bean stock
salt+pepper
For topping:
~4 medium potatoes, peeled, boiled and mashed with
-marg, olive oil, fake milk, salt+pepper to taste
Soak the beans overnight, then cook. Cook the rice. Cook the potatoes separately, then mash with oil/marg, milk, salt+pepper (we used a mixture of potato and celeriac and it was yum).
Fry the onion and carrot. Add the rest of the filling ingredients to the onion and carrot and simmer until thickened.
Put the filling in an ovenproof dish, top with the mashed potato, and bake in a 400F oven for 20-30 min until the top of the mashed potato has started to brown and the filling is bubbling.
Note: I followed the recipe fairly approximately - used ingredients as above but just guessed quantities.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Black pepper tofu
This is by Yotam Ottolenghi, from the Guardian. I made it for the first time a while ago and it was good, if very very spicy. That endorphin-triggering, intense heat. Addictive, I guess - I seem to be wanting more... This time I decided to reduce the heat by leaving out the chili and just using the black pepper: it's still hot, but not so mouth-blowing.
Serves four.
800g firm, fresh tofu / 200g
cornflour, to dust the tofu
Vegetable oil, for frying
150g butter / use veg oil ~ 2tbsp
12 small shallots (350g), peeled and thinly sliced / 1 medium onion
8 red chillies, thinly sliced / none
12 garlic cloves, crushed / 3 , finely chopped
3 tbsp chopped ginger / 3/4 tbsp
5 tbsp crushed black peppercorns / 1 1/4 tbsp
3 tbsp sweet soy sauce (kecap manis) / 3/4 tbsp sweet chili sauce
3 tbsp light soy sauce / 3/4 tbsp
4 tsp dark soy sauce / 1 tbsp
2 tbsp sugar / 1/2 tbsp
16 small, thin spring onions, cut into segments 3cm long / 3 medium sized, cut into slivers
Cut the tofu into 3cm x 2cm blocks and toss them in cornflour, shaking off the excess. Pour in enough oil to come 0.5cm up the sides of a large frying pan, and bring up to frying heat. Fry the tofu in batches in the oil, turning the pieces as you go. Once they are golden all around, and have a thin crust, transfer to a paper towel.
Remove the oil and any sediment from the pan and put back in 2 tbsp of veg oil. Heat and add the shallots/onions, (chillies), garlic and ginger, and sauté for about 15 minutes on low-medium heat, stirring occasionally, until the contents of the pan are shiny and totally soft. While you wait, crush the peppercorns, using a pestle and mortar or a spice grinder. They should be quite coarse.
When the shallots/onions and (chillies) are soft, add the soy sauces, sweet chili and the sugar, stir, then stir in the crushed pepper. Warm the tofu in the sauce for about a minute, then add the spring onion and stir through. Serve hot with steamed rice.
Ate it with boiled basmati rice and yellow peas.
I made various substitutions because of not having the right ingredients etc, but it still came out very tasty. Considering doing it with the addition of some sweet pepper instead of chilis another time - I do feel like it misses an element of taste without the chili somehow. Still really good though (and not as scary). Made enough for two. Would consider frying the rest of the tofu and keeping it to make something else the next day (this amount was half a regular-sized packet of tofu), as frying like this is so stinky and gross.
Serves four.
800g firm, fresh tofu / 200g
cornflour, to dust the tofu
Vegetable oil, for frying
150g butter / use veg oil ~ 2tbsp
12 small shallots (350g), peeled and thinly sliced / 1 medium onion
8 red chillies, thinly sliced / none
12 garlic cloves, crushed / 3 , finely chopped
3 tbsp chopped ginger / 3/4 tbsp
5 tbsp crushed black peppercorns / 1 1/4 tbsp
3 tbsp sweet soy sauce (kecap manis) / 3/4 tbsp sweet chili sauce
3 tbsp light soy sauce / 3/4 tbsp
4 tsp dark soy sauce / 1 tbsp
2 tbsp sugar / 1/2 tbsp
16 small, thin spring onions, cut into segments 3cm long / 3 medium sized, cut into slivers
Cut the tofu into 3cm x 2cm blocks and toss them in cornflour, shaking off the excess. Pour in enough oil to come 0.5cm up the sides of a large frying pan, and bring up to frying heat. Fry the tofu in batches in the oil, turning the pieces as you go. Once they are golden all around, and have a thin crust, transfer to a paper towel.
Remove the oil and any sediment from the pan and put back in 2 tbsp of veg oil. Heat and add the shallots/onions, (chillies), garlic and ginger, and sauté for about 15 minutes on low-medium heat, stirring occasionally, until the contents of the pan are shiny and totally soft. While you wait, crush the peppercorns, using a pestle and mortar or a spice grinder. They should be quite coarse.
When the shallots/onions and (chillies) are soft, add the soy sauces, sweet chili and the sugar, stir, then stir in the crushed pepper. Warm the tofu in the sauce for about a minute, then add the spring onion and stir through. Serve hot with steamed rice.
Ate it with boiled basmati rice and yellow peas.
I made various substitutions because of not having the right ingredients etc, but it still came out very tasty. Considering doing it with the addition of some sweet pepper instead of chilis another time - I do feel like it misses an element of taste without the chili somehow. Still really good though (and not as scary). Made enough for two. Would consider frying the rest of the tofu and keeping it to make something else the next day (this amount was half a regular-sized packet of tofu), as frying like this is so stinky and gross.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
