Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Update
I wanted to apologize for the long hiatus. I am getting Married in a week so I have not had time to add any new posts. I hope to start posting by the beg of Jan.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Peppers and Onion Panini
Ingredients:
1 green pepper
1 onion
balsamic vinegarette
pepper jack cheese
bread (rolls work great)
couple cloves of fresh garlic (optional)
parmesan cheese to taste
red pepper flakes to taste
oregano to taste
salt if required
mushrooms (optional)
Grill peppers and onions in balsamic vinegarette with some garlic, parmesan, oregano and red pepper. Put filling in a roll with cheese. Grill the panini with some balsamic. You can also add mushrooms to this.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Enchiladas
Servings: approx. 4
Ingredients:
Green, Red, Yellow Peppers about 7 oz. ( a good chance to use left over veggies)
1 medium red onion cut into long pieces
Olive oil
1 large can of Goya black beans
Mexican Cheese
wheat wraps (do not feel as heavy as regular flour tortillas)
Spring onions (optional)
Sauce:
1 large tomato diced or a can of tomato sauce
3 garlic cloves
1/2 cup of cut cilantro
approx. 1 tsp of concentrate tamarind
1/2 jalapeno cut (depending on how spicy you want add up to 1 jalapeno)
3 tbsp any store bought preferably chocolate chipotle sauce (adds smokey flavor)
Add salt to taste
Preparation:
Three tablespoons of olive oil and sautee peppers, onions and black beans. Blend all ingredients for sauce, keep 1/4 of the sauce on the side to add to top of the enchiladas add the rest to the onion, peppers and beans. Add a few tablespoons to cheese to the mixture as well. Let the sauce simmer for up to 5 minutes. Turn the heat off and let it cool and than spoon the mixture in the wrap with cheese. Add sauce to the top of the enchiladas along with cheese and spring onions if you have some around. Bake in the ove for 10-15 minutes.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Paneer Makhani meets Bhurji
Tonight I wanted to make Paneer Makhani. I realized I did not have milk or cream and I did not have time to step out to the store. Than I decided to make Paneer Bhurji since it does not need the cream/milk. Since I did not have tomatoes on hand, I used tomato sauce instead. I did not have peppers so I used frozen mixed vegetables. I decided to fuse the recipes and I made what I call "Paneer Makhani meets Bhurji". Its wetter than Bhurji but still not saucy like Makhani.
Serving: 5-6 servings
Bhurji...
Ingredients:
olive oil
400 grams of Paneer (crumble using a cheese shredder)
1 medium red onion
1 red chili
1 small green chili
1 tsp of fresh ginger
1 1/2 tbsp of fresh garlic
pinch of asofetida
salt to taste
approz. 2 cups of frozen mixed vegetables (substitute for peppers)
1-2 tsp of dhana-jeeru (coriander-cumin powder)
2-3 tsp of garam masala powder
1 tsp of turmeric
Now for the Makhani touch.....
1 can of tomato sauce/puree
2-3 tbsp of butter
pepper to taste
2 bay leaves
pinch of cardmom powder
pinch of sugar
and finally my extra touch ...
2-3 tsp of tandoori barbeque powder
Directions:
Heat two tablespoons of olive oil in a pan. Add the asofetida, onions, chillis, ginger, garlic, tumeric, dhana-jeeru, turmeric, salt to taste, tandoori barbeque masala and garam masala, . Cook until onions are tender. Add butter and paneer and stir fry for a few minutes so paneer cooks. Add tomato sauce, bay leaves, cardamom powder, pepper and pinch of sugar.Cook for about 5 minutes on med-low. Add vegetables and and cook on low for a couple mins. Eat with paratha's.
Monday, October 5, 2009
Cucumber Family Event - October 30 - November 15
Hello everyone! On behalf of the Cooking and Baking Fetish foodie community I have the pleasure of hosting the Cucumber family event. Fall vegetables include pumpkins, gourds, squash etc. which are all part of the cucumber family. I am looking forward to exciting and creative recipes using these vegetables.
Please restrict recipes to vegetarian. Include C & B cooking event in your blog post and have your post link back to http://cookingandbakingfetish.ning.com/events and http://mowglichic.blogspot.com . Email your name, the name of your entry/dish, link to your blog post, a picture and a short description of your dish.
Email: sheth01@gmail.com
If you do not have blog, feel free to email me the above info for your entry. Thanks!!
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Chinese Eggplant in Garlic Sauce
I went to the farm today and picked many vegetables including eggplant. I decided to make a last minute Chinese eggplant in garlic sauce. I have never made eggplant in garlic sauce but its one of my favorite dishes in a Chinese restaurant. I looked up some recipes online to get an idea of the basic ingredients. I found that I did not have many of these ingredients such as hoison sauce, corn starch, oyster sauce etc. I decided to make up my own recipe and it came out really good. Here goes....
Ingredients:
3 small eggplants preferably Japanese eggplants
1 tbsp minced ginger root
1 tbsp minced garlic
2 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp of sesame oil
1 tsp of chili garlic sauce
1/4 cup of water
approx. 2 tsp sugar
1 tbsp of General Tsao's sauce
2 tbsp red vinegar dressing/marinade
1 tbsp of tomato sauce
salt to taste
Heat up sesame oil and add ginger root, garlic, soy sauce and water. Allow this simmer on low while you cut the eggplant into cubes. Add the chili garlic sauce, sugar, General Tsao's sauce, red vinegar marinade, tomato sauce and eggplant. Cook for about 15 minutes or until tender. Add salt to taste. Serve with white rice.
Friday, September 18, 2009
Mesir Wat - Ethiopian red lentil puree
Ethiopian cuisine is very distinct from most African cuisine. It uses many spices that are found in Indian and Middle Eastern cuisine. My first Ethiopian restaurant encounter was in New Brunswick, NJ about 3 years ago. The restaurant is called Makedas and it has a great atmosphere with seating on wicker furniture and all the the food is served on a large piece of Injera (bread) on a large plate. The food was great, the bread reminded me of South Indian Dosa and many of the vegetable and lentil dishes taste very familiar. There are so many vegetarian dishes to choose from, Ethiopian cuisine is vegetarian friendly since many Ethiopians fast due to religion and during that time they do not eat meat. I finally picked Mesir Wat, a red lentil dish (masoor dal). I got the basic recipe from whats4eats.com. I made a few modifications. I also used more niter kibbeh sauce than the original recipe asked for. I love the aromas from this spicy butter sauce. I would like to enter to this to the 15th My Legume Love Affair, Susan's event.
Servings: 6
Ingredients:
2 red onions
1 cup of green beans
1 cup of carrots
3-4 garlic cloves
pinch of ginger powder
1 cup of niter kibbeh (click on the link for the recipe)
1 tbsp of Indian chili powder (mild chili powder)
1 tsp turmeric
1 lb of red lentils
2 cans of vegetable stock (4 cups)
salt and pepper to taste
optional: type of bread or rice
Make the niter kibbeh. This spicy butter sauce needs to simmer on low for about an hour. Strain the niter kibbeh into a large pot through a steel colander (a steel tea strainer works well). Using a food processor puree the onions. Add the niter kibbeh, onion puree, turmeric, chili powder, pressed garlic cloves, green beans, carrots and ginger powder. Let this simmer for about 2 minutes. Add the vegetable stock, stir and allow to simmer on low-medium for 5 minutes. Add the red lentils and cook for 30 minutes. Finally, add salt and pepper to taste. Serve with Injera bread, if you cannot make or do not have access to this bread,v you can eat this with wheat tortilla, Indian bread, pita bread or any type of rice.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Chimichurri sauce - Argentina
I decided to enter this original recipe round-up.
I decided to make chimichurri sauce. This delicious south american marinade/sauce is normally used with meat but is versatile and can be used in vegetarian food as well. To me its Argentina's chutney! I love the original chimichurri recipe with olive oil, parsley, garlic, vinegar and red pepper flakes. I made many modifications and came up with an entirely new, different creamy chimichurri that was a great hit at dinner. I added the chimichurri to portobello marinated in balsamic vinegar. I made this into a panini sandwich.
Servings approx. 4 - should make about 6 sandwiches with sauce left over
Ingredients for sauce:
3/4 buch of parsley
1/2 cup of olive oil
1/4 cup of red vinegar marinade/dressing
1/2 large shallot
2 pinches of cumin
2 pinches of chili powder
1 pinch of ginger powder
1 tsp of oregano
1 tbsp sugar (to taste if you feel its sweet enough do not add)
1 tso of dried basil
1 cap full of lemon juice
1 small green chili (add more if you like things spicy)
2-3 tbsp sour cream
2 tbsp Sabra's tahini hummus
2-3 tbsp tomato sauce
salt to taste
Ingredients for sandwich:
1 package of sliced portobello mushrooms
1 loaf of bread
1 package of pizza blend or italian blend cheese
red pepper flakes
Blend all the sauce ingredients together. It seems like a lot of hodge podge. I kept adding, tasting etc. In the end I think it came out great. Even with the tomato sauce your sauce will retain its green color as shown in the picture. Marinate the portobello mushrooms on a skillet with a light balsamic vinegar, allow the mushrooms to absorb the juices while you are making your sauce. Add approx 2 tbsp of the sauce, 3-4 slices of portobello mushrooms in any kind of bread with some mozzarella cheese and sprinkle on some red pepper flakes. Yum!Cook in a panini maker, skillet or oven.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Gujarati Tindora - Ivy gourd
Tindora is eaten all over India. Growing up in a Gujarati household we ate tindora quite often. It is one of my favorite vegetables but its not always easy to find. I was craving a traditional Guju meal so I bought some the other day and decided to cook it. This is my mother's recipe, its a simple and easy dish to make which can be accompanied with dal, rice and possibly roti.
Another good thing to know is that it is has many nutrients and its great for diabetics due to its low glycemic index.
Servings: 2
Ingredients:
approx. 1 lb of Tindora
1/2 tsp turmeric
2 tsp dhana-jeeru (mix of coriander and cumin powder, I like more masala you can put less)
red chili powder to taste
salt to taste
pinch of asafoetida (hing)
1 tbsp olive oil
coriander (optional as a garnish)
Cut tindora into halves or quarters. Heat oil on medium heat, add the hing. When the hing starts to sizzle add in the tindora. Add 1/4 cup of water, turmeric, dhana-jeeru, salt and red chili powder and allow tindora to simmer on low-medium heat with a cover. Periodically check to see if the tindora are tender if not add more water, cook until tender.
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Frankie - Mumbai's snack wrap
This is my version of Mumbai's famous Frankie. It is great for a quick lunch or it could be a great vegetarian breakfast wrap.
Makes one wrap.
Ingredients:
1 Ore Ida Hash brown patty or boiled/mashed potatoes or home fries
1/4 onion chopped
2 small green chilli's chopped
cilantro for garnish
1 1/2 tbsp. lemon juice
1/2 tsp of paprika
2 tsp of chaat masala (availble in indo-pak store)
salt to taste
1/2 piece of lavash bread
Italian cheese blend (any cheese works)
1/2 tbsp olive oil
Cilantro chutney to taste
Saute the onions and chilis in a pan until the onions turn a lighter red color and are tender. Bake, fry or however you want to prepare your potato's. I used boiled potato's cut into cubes. Add the potato mixture into the onion/chili mixture. Put the mixture in the middle of a 1/2 piece of lavash bread. Add the cheese on the hot mixture and allow the cheese to melt. In the meantime, add lemon juice, paprika, salt to taste, cilantro and chaat masala. Roll the wrap and cut into half in an angle.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Lavash Bread Pizza
Servings: 4
Ingredients:
Sauce:
1 can of tomato sauce
olive oil
1 can of tomato paste
oregano ti taste
sugar to taste
salt to taste
4 pieces of lavash bread
mozzarella (pizza blend of cheese)
approx. 1/2 onion
8 cloves of garlic (use as much as desired)
3 small green chilis
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Grease a pan or use pizza stone. To make sauce cook tomato sauce, tomato paste and olive oil. Add some oregano, salt and sugar to taste. Cut onions and use a garlic press. I like garlic so I used approx. 3-4 cloves of garlic for 2 of the pizza's. I used small green chilis for the other 2 pizza's. Heat the pizza in the oven for approx. 15 minutes or until the crust turns brown.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Mexican dessert - Fried Ice Cream
Fried ice cream seems like an oxymoron. Opposites attract and the combination is delicious.
There are many ways to make fried ice cream. You can use tortilla which I think is fitting for a Mexican dessert. You can also use cereals such as corn flakes, cinnamon toast crunch. Be creative there are so many cereals and flavors of ice craem out there and you can use different types of bread. I choose to use bread. I had cinnamon bread lying around in my kitchen that I really wanted to use up and I thought it would taste great.
Ingredients:
Slices of bread
Ice cream
saran wrap or foil (I used foil)
cinnamon (optional)
vegetable oil
flour
sugar
egg substitute
butter
milk
For the batter I looked up the recipe for the proportions. The recipe I looked up makes 30-35 fried ice cream so BE SURE to use a measurement converter. I substituted Ener-G for the eggs. I did not use orange extract, instead I put a dash of cinnamon. I used butter pecan ice cream, be creative with the ice cream.
Put the ice cream in between the slices of bread and mold it into a ball, use a knife to cut around the edges and take the crust off. Freeze in saran wrap or foil till it is hard/frozen. Roll the frozen ice cream-bread in the batter. Make sure the oil is hot and be careful when you carefully place the batter covered ice cream into the oil. Fry until the batter starts turning light brown.
If you are not using bread make the ice cream into balls and freeze them. Roll the balls in batter and than roll them in a cereal of your choice. For example use coco pebbles and use strawberry ice cream. You can add chocolate powder to the batter instead of cinnamon as well.
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Yigandes Me Spanaki - Greek Spinach, Bean and Feta Casserole
Yesterday I made a Greek dish (Yigandes Me Spanaki) Spinach, Bean and Feta Oven Casserole. I used Nancy's recipe at about.com. Its a healthy side dish. I added carrots for some color and sweetness. I used lima beans instead of yigandes beans but would love to try yigandes beans as well. I did not have fresh dill so I used rosemary and thyme which tasted great. This could also be a great filling for a pita sandwich.
Friday, September 4, 2009
Guasacaca - Venezuelan Salsa
This salsa is a colorful alternative to mushy guacamole. It is very simple and quick to make. I got this recipe from Kathy. I made some modifications. I used a red onion, orange pepper instead of green pepper and 3 tbsp of a hot salsa instead of hot sauce. This salsa taste really fresh and perfect.
Ingredients:
2 avocados
1 medium red onion
2 tbsp lemon juice
3/4 cup of cilantro
1 medium tomato
1 orange pepper
salt to taste
3 tbsp hot salsa
Braziliian Vegetable Curry
Brazilian food includes manioc (yucca), black beans and rice. Each region of Brazil specializes in a type of cuisine and is influenced by a certain region. Brazilian food has been greatly influenced by African and Caribbean countries and like the Caribbeans rice and beans are traditional dish in every Brazilian household. While I was cooking the vegetable curry, the smells and flavors reminded me of many cuisines. The coconut in the curry reminded me of Thai food. The chickpeas, onion, garlic and tomatoes reminded me of Indian food. This dish is rich in flavor and hearty. There is a lot of room to be creative.
I got this recipe from pinkcherryblossom, recipe. I made some modifications. I used yucca since it is a Brazilian staple. The yucca taste delicious in the gravy. I could not find coconut cream so I used coconut milk. I also used ginger powder instead of the root. I added very little curry powder, I did not want to overpower the flavors but just 1-2 tsp for such a large quantity of food gave the dish a lot of depth. I added extra garlic 3 cloves instead of 2. I did not roast the vegetables since I did not have that much time but I did cook most of the liquid out. I will make sure I have enough time to roast it next time. Roasting it will give it an interesting texture especially since I have added yucca to the dish. I served this with flour tortilla and ate it like an Indian curry. It was delicious!!
Servings: approx. 6
Ingredients:
- 1 yucca (manioc)
- 2 red onions
- 1 eggplant
- 2 red peppers
- 1 can chickpeas
- 3 garlic cloves
- pinch of ground ginger powder
- 1 red chile, deseeded (I used a medium-hot Jamaican chile)
- 2-3 large chopped tomatoes
- 1/2 cup of coconut milk
- 4 tbsp cilantro
- 3 tbsp olive oil
- pinch of curry powder
Using a food processor mix the garlic cloves, chile, ginger powder and onions. Cook this sauce mixture in a separate pot.
Spray a wok with cooking spray and saute the vegetables, yucca and tomatoes. Cook off the excess water so it is not too soupy.
Add the sauce mixture to the wok along with curry powder and salt to taste. Add the chickpeas, coconut milk and cilantro. Occasionally stir the vegetable curry and allow the flavors to simmer for about 10 mintues on low-medium or until excess liquid no longer remains.
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Low Sugar "Peach Cobbler" Parfait
A quick and low sugar dessert that I made up one night. I decided to enter it in the original recipe round-up.
Servings: approx. 2
Ingredients:
2 peaches
whipping cream or cool whip
graham cracker crumbs (granola or cereal)
butter peacan ice cream (no sugar added)
splenda to taste (I used 1 tbsp of baking splenda)
1 cap of lemon juice
1 tsp nutmeg
2 tsp cinnamon
In a blender, blend peaches, butter pecan ice cream, splenda, lemon juice, nutmeg and cinnamon.
If you are using whipping cream, use mixer until whipping cream has peaks. Layer the peach mixture on the bottom of the glass. Add graham cracker crumbs, whipping cream and another layer of peach mixture. Alternate as much as you like.
Korean Noodle Stir-fry
This recipe was inspired by Susan's recipe, check out her blog.I loved how she cooked the tofu in the sesame oil, soy, water mixture. I could never get my tofu to brown the way it did after I followed her method. I followed her recipe to a good extent but I did make some modifications.
I used vermicelli noodles instead of buckwheat soba noodles. I checked at all my local groceries stores and nearby asian market, unfortunately I could not find the hot pepper paste. I think I will have to go to Korea Town in New York City to find it. I used Korean BBQ sauce instead. I also used more garlic, used scallions instead of onion and added some chilli garlic sauce. Finally, rather than using sugar to add some sweetness I added some general tsao's sauce (I know its not korean but it added the right sweetness).
Servings: approx. 4
Ingredients:
1 package of vermicelli noodles
8 ounces firm tofu
1 tbsp soy sauce mixed, 1/4 tsp sesame oil and 2 tbsp water (to cook tofu)
2 medium yellow squash into cubes
1/2 bunch of scallions
2-3 bok choy cut in thin slices
4 cloves of garlic minced
1 cup mung bean sprouts
1-2 tbsp of korean bbq sauce (add according how spicy you want it)
1/2 tbsp of chilli garlic sauce
3 tbsp water
1 1/2 tbsp of general tso's sauce
1/4 tsp sesame oil
Boil water and cook the vermicelli for approx. 6-8 minutes, check the instructions on the package for cooking time. Once it is cooked drain, rinse in cold water and set aside.
Heat up a wok and use cooking spray. Once heated add tofu and sesame oil, water, soy sauce. Cook until the tofu browns. Once the liquid has cooked off set tofu aside.
Add cut squash, scallions and garlic and cover for a few minutes till squash looks tender. Add the bean sprouts and cover for about a minute. Add the bok-choy and cover until the bok-choy looks wilt but is still green. Finally, add the korean bbq sauce, chilli garlic sauce, general tso's sauce and soy sauce to taste. Allow for vegetables to simmer in the sauces for about 5 minutes. Finally add the tofu and noodles.
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Tommorrow's line-up
Tomorrow should be an exciting day. I am cooking from two countries Barbados (Bajan cuisine) and Korea. I plan to make a "Mango Fool" dessert as my Bajan cuisine and a Korean noodle stir-fry. It uses a spicy Korean sauce and combines ingredients found in Korean food but rather than using rice I was inspired by a recipe that I will post up to use buckwheat noodles. I will be going to the Asian market tomorrow and hope to find my ingredients. I hope things work out.
On another note, the country after that is Nepal and I already found a great dish called "Vegetable Thukpa" that requires a spice called lovage. There is a lot of information out there claiming that lovage seeds and ajwain are the same. I am quite confused. After calling a few spice stores in New York City (living near the city is great I feel like I have access to everything) they claimed to either have the lovage root and no seeds or to have ajwain seeds which they passed off as being the same. But I have found information claiming that this is a mistake and that they are infact different. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajwain)
I want this dish to taste authentic. Spices are very important, a signature part of the flavor and origins of the cuisine. I have emailed a Nepalese cook who has posted recipes online using lovage. I hope to get an answer. In the meantime, if anyone has any more info or can help me please let me know!! These spice stores look so interesting. I could spend a day learning about all the spices better yet take a class on them!
On another note, the country after that is Nepal and I already found a great dish called "Vegetable Thukpa" that requires a spice called lovage. There is a lot of information out there claiming that lovage seeds and ajwain are the same. I am quite confused. After calling a few spice stores in New York City (living near the city is great I feel like I have access to everything) they claimed to either have the lovage root and no seeds or to have ajwain seeds which they passed off as being the same. But I have found information claiming that this is a mistake and that they are infact different. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajwain)
I want this dish to taste authentic. Spices are very important, a signature part of the flavor and origins of the cuisine. I have emailed a Nepalese cook who has posted recipes online using lovage. I hope to get an answer. In the meantime, if anyone has any more info or can help me please let me know!! These spice stores look so interesting. I could spend a day learning about all the spices better yet take a class on them!
Monday, August 31, 2009
Gujarati Toor Dal
I am Gujarati, Gujarat is the western most state of India. Gujarati's love to add some sweetness to their savory food, it is our signature. Gujarati Toor Dal is known for its distinct sweetness which comes from jaggery(brown sugar). I loveToor Dal, it a part of a typical Gujarati meal.
Finally, I have come as close as I ever have to getting my Guju Dal to taste like my mother's. Thanks to my aunt, I was able to figure out the missing ingredient that gave the flavor some body (tamarind).
Saturday, August 29, 2009
Kazakh Cuisine
Gutap - Kazakh Herb Phyllo Pastries
The first cuisine that I will start with is Kazakh cuisine. Kazahstan is situated in Central Asia/Eastern Europe, it borders Russia, China, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. Historically, Kazakhstanis were nomadic people. Kazakh cuisine is not vegetarian friendly it mainly consists of meat and dairy.
After a lot of research I did come across many baked goods that are a part of Kazakh cuisine. A custom called dastarkhan (a feast for visiting guests and special occasions) includes a dish called Gutap. Gutap is a fried herb fritter that is served with a delicious dip that taste just like a french onion dip. I have found a recipe online, here is a link Gutap. I am modifying the recipe slightly. I am using phyllo pastry in order to make a healthier version.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Italian style baked beans
This is a great savory breakfast/brunch that we love on Sunday's at our household so I decided to enter it in the WYF Breakfast event contest. These baked beans are quick, easy to make, healthy and full of protein.
Approx. 2-3 servings (1 can)
Ingredients:
1 can Heinz vegetarian baked beans
1 garlic clove
1/2 small red onion
cilantro
oregano
crushed red pepper flakes (or green chili is optional substitute)
1 tbsp olive oil (Mediterranean or red pepper infused oil preferable)
salt
grated Parmesan-reggiano cheese (optional, add to taste)
wheat or grain sandwich bread
Mozzarella cheese (shredded or preferably fresh)
Optional:
Replace oregano and cilantro with fresh basil (4 leaves) and parsley (1 tbsp)
Mince garlic, dice onions, chop cilantro leaves and saute in oil with oregano, salt to taste and crushed red pepper flakes on medium heat for about one minute. Add can of Heinz vegetarian beans. Cook for about 5 minutes on medium to low heat.
Toast the sandwich bread in oven at approx. 350 degrees. Take the toast out of the oven, add layer of baked beans and mozzarella cheese and put it back in the oven for 5 minutes or until the cheese has melted.
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
192 cuisines in 291 days
I have always wanted to learn recipes/cuisine from all over the world. I hope to learn of new way to combine ingredients that I can apply to my cooking for a fusion creation.
I will randomly select countries during the next 291 days and than pick a vegetarian dish from each country and use it as an inspiration to create a dish. I may modify certain elements to make it healthier or easier to make.
According to different sources there are about 192,194,195 countries in the world. I have decided to include 192 countries in this project.
I will randomly select countries during the next 291 days and than pick a vegetarian dish from each country and use it as an inspiration to create a dish. I may modify certain elements to make it healthier or easier to make.
According to different sources there are about 192,194,195 countries in the world. I have decided to include 192 countries in this project.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Pear and Cheese "Baklava" Pastries
If you are not a baker this is a great way to make dessert that is easy. I came up with this one day when I was trying to figure out what to do with a can of pears.
This makes about 2-3 small servings.
Ingredients:
1 package of Pilsbury Pastry Sheets (recipe only uses 2-3 sheets)
Pepper Jack Cheese (or you can use cheddar)
2 tbsp walnuts
2 tsp cinnamon
pinch of nutmeg
1 can pears (no sugar added)
3-4 tbsp light brown sugar (add to taste)
butter
To make the fruit mixture in a pan add a can of pears, nutmeg, cinnamon and brown sugar simmer on low (approx. 20 minutes) . Stir and mash mixture until it becomes close to the texture of apple sauce. Allow it to cool and than add walnuts.
Take out pastry sheets ahead of time and allow them to thaw. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Once the pastry sheets have thawed layer the pear mixture and slices of cheese (I put approx. 4 cubes of pepper jack in between two pastry sheets). You can use 3 pastry sheets rather than 2 if you prefer. Place the pastries on baking sheet or non-stick pan. Brush melted butter on the pastry. Bake 15 minutes.
Vegetarian Singapore Noodles
Ingredients:
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 1 green bell pepper
- 1 red or yellow onion
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- Chili garlic sauce to taste
- hakka noodles for 4 servings, pre-cooked
- 3 tbsp curry powder
- 2-3 tbsp soy sauce
Preparation:
Sautee bell pepper, onion, garlic and chili garlic sauce in olive oil for a few minutes.Add pre-cooked noodles and mix well.
Add curry powder and soy sauce.
Monday, August 24, 2009
Summer Pineapple Salsa
A great idea for entertaining that is fast, healthy and has a touch of tropical, salsa! Here's a pineapple salsa recipe that I posted on about.com (vegetarian forum). It goes great with banana chips.
You could also make some fresh plantain chips (refer to plantain chip recipe) and add some salt/pepper.
Pineapple Salsa:Ingredients:
- 3/4 can diced pineapple, drained and rinsed
- 1 bunch green onions
- 1 jalapeno pepper
- 1/4 bunch cilantro
- 3 tbsp lemon juice
- salt and black pepper to taste
- 2 tbsp spiced olive oil, or, use regular olive oil and add chili powder to taste
Preparation:
Rinse the diced pineapple in a colander and add it the rest of the ingredients. You can dice the pepper, onions and cilantro and use a hand blender just a few times until it becomes a chunky salsa texture. Try to keep in the refrigerator for 30 minutes before serving to allow the flavors to soak in.Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Plantain chips dipped in chocolate and sprinkled with cinnamon
These delicious sweet and salty chips are easy and great for parties.
Ingedients:
Green Plantains
Vegetable oil
Salt
Cinnamon
semi-sweet Chocolate chips
Cut green plantains into very thin long slices and fry in oil until they brown and look like chips. Place chips on a napkin and sprinkle with some salt.
Melt semi-sweet chocolate or milk chocolate chips in microwave until they start melting and then mix until it becomes a smooth texture. Dip half the chips into the chocolate and place in a dish. Finally sprinkle with cinnamon.
Lavash Bread
Lavash bread makes amazing pizza! I made pizza last week with them
and the crust was so thin and crisp. It was perfect! I def recommend it for people
who love thin crust. I use Toufayan Lavash Bread - White from Shoprite.
and the crust was so thin and crisp. It was perfect! I def recommend it for people
who love thin crust. I use Toufayan Lavash Bread - White from Shoprite.
Monday, August 17, 2009
Plantain roll
Ingredients:
2 green plantains
pinch of cumin seeds
pinch of mustard seeds
1 tsp of asafoetida powder
1 tsp turmeric powder
1 dried chilli
1 1/2 tsp coriander/cumin powder mixture
2 tbsp vegetable oil
1/2 tsp indian chilli powder (add according to your spice level)
1/2-1 tsp of pure tamarind paste
salt to taste
2 large wheat rotis
Optional:
Amul cheese slices
Jain tomato sauce
Tomato soup
Boil the plantains until the peel starts turning a brown/black color but before it is entirely black. Check with a fork, it should not be too soft. Cut plantains into cubes. Saute dried chilli pepper, asafoetida powder, cumin seeds, mustard seeds, coriander/cumin powder mixture, turmeric powder until it sizzles. Add plantain cubes and saute till it starts browning. Add salt to taste and tamarind paste. Cook until it starts charring. Put plaintains in the roti and roll. I am going to try adding cheese to see how it tastes. I am going to serve this with Jain tomato sauce and a bowl of tomato soup since the roll may be dry.
2 green plantains
pinch of cumin seeds
pinch of mustard seeds
1 tsp of asafoetida powder
1 tsp turmeric powder
1 dried chilli
1 1/2 tsp coriander/cumin powder mixture
2 tbsp vegetable oil
1/2 tsp indian chilli powder (add according to your spice level)
1/2-1 tsp of pure tamarind paste
salt to taste
2 large wheat rotis
Optional:
Amul cheese slices
Jain tomato sauce
Tomato soup
Boil the plantains until the peel starts turning a brown/black color but before it is entirely black. Check with a fork, it should not be too soft. Cut plantains into cubes. Saute dried chilli pepper, asafoetida powder, cumin seeds, mustard seeds, coriander/cumin powder mixture, turmeric powder until it sizzles. Add plantain cubes and saute till it starts browning. Add salt to taste and tamarind paste. Cook until it starts charring. Put plaintains in the roti and roll. I am going to try adding cheese to see how it tastes. I am going to serve this with Jain tomato sauce and a bowl of tomato soup since the roll may be dry.
Paryushan
I am starting this blog on the second day of my religious week called Paryushan (Jain religion). Due to diet restrictions during the next 7 days I look forward to being even more creative while cooking.
Paryushan is a week to reflect on all the bad deeds one has done over the past year and to ask for forgiveness from all creatures and living beings. During this week in order to control desires, focus energy towards spirituality and cleanse the body our diet is limited to fruits, beans, nuts and dried masala that do not contain any of the following restricted foods: vegetables, roots (onion, garlic, ginger etc.) and breads.
Paryushan is a week to reflect on all the bad deeds one has done over the past year and to ask for forgiveness from all creatures and living beings. During this week in order to control desires, focus energy towards spirituality and cleanse the body our diet is limited to fruits, beans, nuts and dried masala that do not contain any of the following restricted foods: vegetables, roots (onion, garlic, ginger etc.) and breads.
Welcome
I think it is a lot of fun to cook as a vegetarian, it encourages creativity. Every time I cook I try to find ways to modify and even invent new recipes. It also motivates healthy cooking. I love posting up recipes and I am an active member of the Vegetarian forum at about.com. I decided to start a blog where I can post up recipes and I would love your comments and suggestions.
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