Do you like mushrooms? Have I got a recipe for you, adapted from Food & Wine magazine November 2015 issue. I used more sage (2 tsp vs. my 2 tbsp) and
was happy for it as the sage added a woodsy-like smell to go with button, baby bella, shiitake, and oyster mushrooms.
"Mushrooms. Meat for vegetarians." was the advertising tagline for Australian mushroom growing industry. Makes no difference to me. I like mushrooms,
vegetarian or not. The wilder, the better. Maybe it's the childhood memories of my Grandma picking fresh mushrooms in the forest, or their smell as she dried
them for winter, or how they add flavor to warming dishes. Having barley also induced childhood memories. Such a filling grain. Nutritious, too. One cup is
loaded with more fiber than you would think (~ 32 g), has a high amount of protein (~ 23 g), and appears to be a nice source of magnesium, iron, and vitamin B-6!
This one is good for lunch (~ 6 servings) or as a side (~ 8-10 servings). Bring it to room temperature, if you prepared it earlier or maybe zap it in the
microwave on the vegetable reheating setting. Prepare to be satisfied.
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Showing posts with label vegetarian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegetarian. Show all posts
Saturday, November 19, 2016
Sunday Feast № 47 | Mushroom Barley Salad
Saturday, October 15, 2016
Sunday Feast № 42 | Wild Rice Cranberry Soup
Not exactly the most photogenic, but sometimes that's what it has to be. You know it. That vegetarian cooked food that you must have to feel nourished, less stuffed, and virtuous. Here is my autumn baby. Adapted from "A Beautiful Bowl of Soup: The best vegetarian recipes" by Paulette Mitchell, I upped and tweaked the portions of the ingredients to match my one-and-only/last/entire supply of vegetable stock: 4 cups.
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Saturday, August 27, 2016
Sunday Feast № 35 | Quinoa Salad
Don't know where this recipe came from. My guess is that it was from a vegetarian magazine or website or blog. It made it into my recipe
notebook back when I didn't keep references. Let me know when you find a reference, but till then I encourage you to give this one a go.
Make the whole batch, which is meant to have 12 servings, and make those servings larger for a stand alone lunch or
eat the leftovers on the weekdays as your carry-with lunch. Chill in the refrigerator in a meantime, of course. With the magic of
quinoa and freshness of vegetables and herb and fruit (yes, tomato is a fruit) and nuttiness, prove me that you are not feeling wholesome
after having this salad. Let me know if used it as a side dish, if you used it a side dish at all, and what did you pair it with.
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No rice cooker?
Lost the box with cooking instructions?
No worries.
Bring 2 qt/2 L of salter water to boil.
Add quinoa, cover, and reduce heat to medium-low.
Simmer for 12-14 min, or until quinoa is tender and small 'tails' bloom
from the grains.
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Saturday, June 18, 2016
Sunday Feast № 25 | Pea Cashew Soup
The inspiration was a scene from "Best in Show", a mockumentary
about a prestigious dog show:
Sherri Ann Cabot: [Discussing her 80 year old husband who's 44 years her senior] Leslie and I have an amazing relationship and it's very physical, he still pushes all my buttons. People say 'oh but he's so much older than you' and you know what, I'm the one having to push him away. We have so much in common, we both love soup and snow peas, we love the outdoors, and talking and not talking. We could not talk or talk forever and still find things to not talk about. Soup. Snow peas. Peas. How about a pea soup? Luck had it that Bon Appétit July 2016 issue arrived earlier and it had a recipe for a more mealy pea soup, thanks to the cashews, that I adapted and dressed up with olive oil and pepper. |
Saturday, February 13, 2016
Sunday Feast № 7 | "Like you'd cook for Picasso in his seventies. Like it's a matter of love and death."
Oh my, it's that day tomorrow, the one that either wakes a crazy ravenous romantic or utterly world weary cynic in you. Either way, you gotta eat! Might as well make a multi-course feast of it, because it is good for your soul and your body.
Puurrrfect!
Whether for tomorrow or any other Sunday when a three course feast is called for (no dessert yet, have to work up my way to that slowly, then again - here I digress once more), the chilled red pepper and tomato soup with fresh prawns can be made the day before and sit pretty in the fridge, the squid stuffed with rice will test your skill and patience during stuffing but it is totally worth the suggestively "naughty" fun and the taste once ready, while Pablo's chicken, although maybe not truly Picasso's dish (then again who knows, too busy entertaining to research), warms and grounds towards olé! Now that sounds like delicious fun *wink* |
Fun on the side and after
Music
Pandora Flamenco Channels
Movie
"Pulp Fiction" & "Under the Skin"
Drink
Hoegaarden with squid & Vinos de Arganza "Flavium" Premium Bierzo 2011 with chicken
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Saturday, January 30, 2016
Sunday Feast № 5 | Burmese Vegetarian
As it goes in some sort of succession, it's time for warm vegetarian food as a center piece. The coconut rice is very rich - take note that it might be quite a few servings from what might look like a small volume - and the vegetable curry is a gentle tummy hugging soul warmer - that might disappear faster than intended. The latter is a great "left over" recipe from my days when I gave vegetarianism a go purely as a way to explore vegetables as a center piece of a meal rather than a side. It's an experiment that I would highly recommend to anyone, especially to those of you who will comeback to animal products. Vegetables will look like a serious contender that does not bore.
Recipes are from “Community Aid Abroad Vegetarian Cookbook”, with few of my alternatives. |
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