Showing posts with label Bread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bread. Show all posts

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Lentil Socca

My chickpea flour is all gone and with no dried chickpeas in my bulk foods stash (and not really into going through another ear piercingly loud experience), I made lentil flour! I dumped some dried brown lentils that I had into the food processor, turned it on and walked away. Processing the lentils was a way less painful experience, thank goodness.

It did not turn out custard-y like classic soccas do but that easily could be me leaving it in the oven for too long. I also used a spring-form pan this time and it was like magic! Super easy to pop it out so I didn't have to deal with the socca sticking to the bottom of the pan.


Lentil Socca
I am not sure if it is technically a socca since I used a different bean flour than chickpea but that's what I'm callin it anyways.

Ingredients:
1 c lentil flour
1 1/4 c water
1 t salt
any other flavorings and add ins that you choose! (my favorite so far is sliced onions and olives)


Directions:
Preheat oven to 400F.
Whisk together all ingredients until smooth.
Pour batter into an oiled 10" spring-form pan (ideal) or pie pan.
Bake for 30-45 minutes, until the socca is pretty firm to the touch.

 Toes

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Onion and Olive Socca

I have been meaning to post this for a while now (about 3 weeks...) and I am finally getting around to it! This socca accompanied me during an all-nighter trying to finish writing a 15 page paper. It was delicious and oh so satisfying. Quite different from my skillet socca and I have to say, I do prefer the texture of this method (baking) compared to preparing it omelette-style.

The inside was like custard. Drool.

Custard-y friggin' goodness.

Ingredients:
1 c chickpea flour (I made mine by food processing dried chickpeas)
1 t salt
1.5 c water
1-2 T oil

a few thin slices of red onion
a few olives, finely chopped
optional: a few sage leaves, finely chopped

Directions:
Preheat oven to 400F
Add oil to a 9-10" pan (I use a skillet because that's all I have)
Mix together flour and salt.
Whisk in water until batter is clump-less (this will be very thin).
Pour batter into pan/skillet.
Place onions, olives and sage thoughtfully into batter.
Bake for 30-40 minutes, until socca has a crust but is soft to the touch.
Optional: Turn oven to broil and bake for 3-5 more minutes for crispiness.

My unsuccessful attempt to remove it from the skillet...

 Horrible picture thanks to the quality of the pictures taken on my phone...

...oh how I wish I hadn't broke my camera.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Cheezy Dorito Sauce

Source: wired.com

Yeah you heard it. This sauce taste exactly like Spicy Doritos. It is SO bizarre. It has been quite a while since I have eaten a Dorito so I wouldn't have completely thought my opinion to be valid however Marcy was there to confirm it. Dorito.

When I ran across it on Averie's blog I had to try it ASAP and I'm so glad of that. Also, Marcy is brilliant for suggesting that we actually attempt to make Doritos. Well we attempted alright but we failed.

The failure sure is tasty though! Not crispy like a Dorito and has less of a punch but I would guess that rolling the dough thinner and adding more cheesy coating and we'd have one hell of an all natural, gluten free, vegan Dorito! (The picture above is particularly appropriate since we created the S&M Doritos instead of going out on a Saturday night. We party hard.)

“Spicy Doritos” Spread
Raw vegan and based off of this recipe.

Ingredients:
1/3 c sunflower seeds, soaked
1/2 c nut/seed of choice, soaked (I used more sunflower but cashews, sesame seeds, hemp seeds, etc. would work just as well)
1/4 c nutritional yeast
1/2 of a red pepper
3 T apple cider vinegar (or lemon juice)
1/2 t salt (or to taste)
1 t cayenne

Directions:
Blend it up!

Sam and Marcy's (S&M) Doritos Attempt 1.
Based off this recipe to make homemade gluten-free cinnamon toast crunch (yeah the sound of that blew me away too...). These measurements ended up with a Doritos-flavored, pita bread-textured treat! If you play around with it and make something more Doritos-like, please let me know.


Ingredients:
1/2 c garbanzo bean flour
1/2 c millet flour (or dried millet ground in a spice/coffee grinder or food processor)
2 T coconut oil, melted
3/4 c water
1 T nutritional yeast
1 t cayenne
1/4 t salt
"Spicy Doritos" Spread (recipe above)

Directions:
Preheat oven to 375 F.
Mix together flours, oil, nutritional yeast, cayenne and salt.
Whisk in water until smooth.
Pour batter into a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper. (Looking back on it, this was our fail. The batter we made was not of a pourable consistency. Add more water!)
Bake for 25-30 minutes, until starting to brown.
Remove from parchment paper and spread with a decent amount of "Spicy Doritos" Spread.
Score into triangle and return to oven for another 5 minutes.
Snack away!

Monday, March 7, 2011

Vegetable Pulp Crackers



I am very blessed to have a juicer. I love fresh veggie juice and it is super healthy for you, however it is a bit of a wasteful practice. Separating plant juice from it's biomass just to drink the juice? Wasteful.

However this little recipe is making me sing a different tune! Crispy and tasty and oh so frugal.

Kristen's Raw is a raw food blog so the cooking is low heat for a long time. The thought process behind this is to not heat your food above roughly 115 degrees so that the living enzymes in food will not be killed. These enzymes help to digest the things that you eat so your body will more energy to do other important processes. I personally do not have a dehydrator so I just cranked my oven down to it's lowest temp (200 degrees) but if you don't really care or don't have the time, turn up the heat! The high fiber from the veggies and omega-3's from the flax certainly won't hurt you ;)

Veggie Pulp Crackers
Ingredients:
2 c vegetable pulp from juicing
1/2 c flax meal (flax seeds ground in a food processor)
1 T tamari
spices (I used chili pepper, cumin, garam masala, and turmeric)


Directions:
Preheat oven to lowest temperature.
Mix together ingredients (For some reason a potato masher just felt right to use for this...)
Roll out dough (or smoosh with fingers) REALLY THIN onto a cookie sheet.
Score with a knife to the size crackers that you desire.
Bake for an hour or two until crispy, flipping halfway through.

**Alternative Directions:
Preheat oven to 350F.
Mix together ingredients (For some reason a potato masher just felt right to use for this...)
Roll out dough (or smoosh with fingersREALLY THIN onto a cookie sheet.
Score with a knife to the size crackers that you desire.
Bake until crispy, 5-15 minutes depending on the oven.

Croutons for Max

I stayed with my brother for a night over the weekend, meaning I spent time with his two kittens (well they're a few months old so not exactly kittens- but they will always be kittens in my mind!). Unlike a "normal" college kid, I am unable to sleep in. So waking up hours before Max, I entertained myself in the kitchen.

Max is far from a healthy eater, well I guess he would be considered "normal" as far as college kids go. You know, ramen and carry-out and the occasional spaghetti and store-bought meat sauce. However he does have one habit that I 100% approve of. Just like my dad, Max likes salad. Not as an everyday, more than once a day thing like I enjoy but not once in a blue moon either.

Anyways, the inspiration for making croutons at 9 am came from trying to promote this behavior and the excessive amounts of bread in Max's apartment (Really? Four loaves of bread for one person??).


Croutons
AKA a great way to use up stale bread


Ingredients:
bread
oil
seasonings (I used dried basil and oregano)

Directions:
Preheat oven to 400F
Cut bread into cubes and dump into a bowl.
Drizzle with oil and toss well to coat.
Sprinkle with seasonings and toss some more.
Pour onto a cookie sheet lined with aluminum foil.
Bake until crispy and golden brown, flipping halfway through (Mine took about 10 minutes but be careful not to burn them!).

Use liberally on salads, soups, or when you get the munchies!







Love, Jayne and Kaylee and Sam

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Life Changing.


Also known as, parmesan "cheese". I am absolutely blown away by how easy this is to make and how versatile it is (meaning how much I want to put this on everything). It is actually eery how much this tastes like cheese. Plus it's mainly sesame seeds which are a good source of Calcium, Iron, Magnesium and Phosphorus, and a very good source of Copper and Manganese.

"Parmesan Cheese"
Ingredients:
1/2 c sesame seeds
2 T nutritional yeast
1/4 t salt

Directions:
Toast sesame seeds in a dry skillet until golden brown and fragrant, about 10 minutes.
Pulse all ingredients in a food processor.
Cover your life in cheeZe.

My Caesar Salad
Adapted from 101 Cookbooks. Spicy, cheeZe-y goodness.





Ingredients:
Dressing
1 garlic clove, minced
1/4 t salt
1/4 c "Parmesan Cheese," above
3 T olive oil
juice of 1 lemon (1/4 c or 1/4 c of apple cider vinegar)
a pinch of red pepper flakes
a pinch of salt
Salad
1 bunch kale
1 T olive oil
1/4 c olives, chopped (optional)
1 slice of good bread (optional)
as much dressing as you see fit

Directions:
Toast bread until golden brown and dry throughout.
Tear into small pieces and pulse in a food processor until the it forms coarse crumbs.


De-stem kale and tear into bite size pieces.
Drizzle with 1 T oil and massage for a few minutes to soften.


Smoosh together the garlic and 1/4 t salt.
Whisk in the rest of the dressing ingredients.


Pour enough dressing over the kale to thoroughly coat.
Toss well, the dressing is thiiick.
Garnish with olives and breadcrumbs.

Sweet Potato and Caramelized Onion Pizza

Sweet Potato and Caramelized Onion Pizza
Inspired by The Hungry Birdie


Ingredients:
1 prepared whole wheat pizza dough
1 onion, sliced
1 sweet potato, thinly sliced into rounds
1 garlic clove, minced
3 T oil
1 T fresh thyme (or 1/2 T dried)
salt and pepper

Directions:
Preheat oven to 400F
Pre-bake rolled out dough for 5 minutes, take out and set aside.
Sprinkle onions with salt and sauté on low heat until soft and caramelized, about 15 minutes, set aside.
In same pan, quickly sauté thinly sliced potatoes until softened, set aside. (You can also steam them)
Add oil to same pan and saute garlic until starting to brown, DO NOT BURN.
Paint garlic-oil mixture onto pre-baked crust.
Spread onions onto dough and sprinkle with freshly ground pepper.
Place sweet potato rounds onto dough and sprinkle with fresh thyme.
Bake for about 10-15 minutes, until golden brown and crispy.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Spiced Carrot-Zucchini Bread


This bread is so good!
Sweet and extremely moist. Plus you can pretend it's good for you since it has veggies in it ;)

Adapted from Hell Yeah It's Vegan!
Ingredients:
6 T ground flax seeds whisked into ½ c + 1 T warm water
0.5 c oil
0.5 c applesauce
2 c brown sugar (I used sucanat)
1 t vanilla
2.5 cups grated zucchini and carrots, (I used 1.5 c carrots + 1 c zucchini)
3 c flour ( I used 2 c whole wheat + 1 c whole wheat pastry flour)
1 t salt
1 T baking soda
1 t baking powder
1 T cinnamon
1/4 t cloves
1/4 t allspice
1/2 t ginger
1/2 raisins (optional)
any other mix-ins (chocolate chips, toasted nuts, coconut...)

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350F
Mix together flax seed mixture, oil, applesauce, sugar, and vanilla.


Stir in grated zucchini and carrots.


In a separate bowl, sift together remaining dry ingredients.
Add dry to wet and stir to incorporate.
If adding additional mix-ins (like chocolate chips, chopped nuts, coconut...), fold them in now.



Spoon batter into 2 greased loaf pans.
Bake for 45-75 minutes, until a toothpick inserted into the middle comes out clean (Mine was 1 hour + 10 minutes).



I only have one loaf pan so I made the remaining batter into muffins!


Muffins only need about 30 minutes to bake.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Oat Crackers

Not gonna lie, I am a little embarrassed with the amount of crackers I have been making... They're just so easy to make and delicious! These babies were so good that they were eaten before I could even think of taking a picture. Delightfully (and surprisingly) sweet. Props to Whole Food for the Whole Family.

Oat Crackers
Ingredients:
3 c oats
1.5 c sunflower seeds
3/4 c spelt flour (or whole wheat)
1.5 t garlic powder
1 t ground cumin
3/4 t salt
1/2 c melted coconut oil
1/2 c brown rice syrup (I think molasses or honey would work as well)
6 T water
3 T sesame seeds

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350F
Grind oats and sunflower seeds in food processor.
Add remaining dry ingredients and pulse until thoroughly mixed.
Stir in wet ingredients.
Roll dough between two pieces of parchment paper until they are 1/8 inch thick.
Remove top sheet and place parchment sheet with dough on baking sheet.
Cut dough into squares (or whatever shape you want your crackers to be).
Sprinkle seasonings on top (I did sesame seeds).
Bake for 15-20 minutes.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Almond-Herb Crackers with Spicy Lentil Dip

Must. Try. Crackers.
Almond-Herb Crackers
Something about using ground almonds instead of flour makes these melt in your mouth. Holy cow. Amazing. Adapted from Elana's Kitchen.

Ingredients*:
2 c almonds
3/4 t salt
2 T dried herbs (I used thyme)
1 T oil
2 T water

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350F
Grind almonds in food processor (or blender) until it reaches the consistency of flour.
Add salt and herbs and pulse until combined.
Whisk together oil and water and mix into almond mixture.
Form dough into a ball and roll out between 2 pieces of parchment paper, until about 1/8" thick.
Remove top piece of parchment paper and transfer onto a baking sheet.
Cut into rolled out dough into squares (or whatever shape you want your crackers to be).
Bake for 10-15 minutes, until golden brown.
Devour. Or enjoy with a dip (like the one below), but I found this to be unnecessary. Yeah, they're that good.

Spicy Lentil Dip
Ingredients*:
1 c cooked lentils
4 cloves of garlic, minced
2 t ground coriander
1 t ground cumin
1/2 t ground turmeric
1/2 t chili powder
1/2 t ground ginger

Directions:
Combine all ingredients in a small saucepan.
Cook gently over low heat for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Allow to cool before serving.
*All of these items can be bought in bulk. Except the garlic cloves, I bought those from Tantre Farm when they still came to the farmer's market (which they stopped doing after November, tear tear)

Hummus and Crackers


Hummus

Everybody loves hummus. Everybody.
Ingredients:
2 c cooked garbanzo beans (2)
1/2 c water
3-5 T apple cider vinegar (traditionally lemon juice) (2)
2 T tahini (3)
2 cloves garlic, minced (4)
1/2 t salt (2)
2 T olive oil (2)
1/4 t cumin (2)
1/4 t paprika (2)
Directions:
Blend all ingredients in a food processor until smooth.
Add more water to achieve desired consistency.
Garnish with a drizzle of olive oil, paprika, and olives.



Basic Whole Wheat Cracker
These where not the best. I ended up just reverting to my tried and true pickles-dipped-in-hummus habit. So good. (Plus McClure's Pickles are made in Michigan and delicious!)
Ingredients:
1 1/2 c whole wheat flour (1)
1/4 t sea salt (2)
2 T oil (2)
6 T of water
sesame seeds (2)
garlic powder (2)
dried thyme (2)
Directions:
Preheat oven to 325F
Mix together first 4 ingredients.
Knead for about 5 minutes.
Roll out onto oiled cookie sheet.
Sprinkle on herbs of your choice (sesame seeds, garlic powder, and thyme for me)
Score crackers the size you want for easy breakage post baking.
Bake for about 20 minutes, until golden brown.

1. Earnst Farm
2. Bulk section of the People's Food Co-op
3. Pre-challenge stash
4. Tantre Farm

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Spelt Baguette for Winter Bruschetta

So my first attempt at sourdough starter was a major fail. In order to console my bread-baking ego I decided to bake bread with commercially-bought yeast (ergghh). But hey you can buy it in bulk at the People's Food Co-op! That makes me feel a little better...

I based this off of a recipe that was in all grams in millileters and apparently in my conversions I screwed something up big time. Therefore, I added in 2 c wheat flour to make the dough drier. This definitely was the bread baking attempt of an ultimate novice. There's only growth from here!




Spelt Baguette
Yeast-y bread Take 1

1T + 2t yeast*
5 T warm water
2 T spelt flour*
2 c water
3 c spelt flour*
2 c whole wheat flour*

In large bowl, mix yeast and warm water until smooth.
Mix in 2 T flour, cover in a rag and allow to do what it do for 20 minutes.
Preheat oven to 400F
Stir in water, and then stir in the flours.
Cover in a rag and allow to rise for an 1.5 hours (I got distracted and let it go for 3.5 hours...)
Separate into 3 baguette-ish shapes and slice notches into the top.
Cook for 20-30 minutes.

*You can buy this in bulk! Do itttt. It's cheaper AND saves packaging waste ;)

What else you can do...

Winter Bruschetta
Death by amazing salty, savory, sweet, stay-inside-and-stuff-your-face-until-you-add-a-healthy-layer-of-fat-and-are-able-to-withstand-the-0-degree-Michigan-winter goodness.


I didn't measure but here are my attempts to quantify my experimentation:
Ingredients:
1 T oil
2 cloves garlic, minced)
1/2 large onion, chopped

pumpkin puree (about 1.5 c)
frozen cranberries (about 1 c)
ginger (1 T perhaps)
nutmeg (1/4 t -ish)

spelt baguette, but into 1-2" pieces

Directions:
Heat oil in saute pan over medium-low heat.
Add onions and saute until softened.
Add garlic, pumpkin and bring to a simmer.
Add in cranberries.
Cook until cranberries burst and start oozing into pumpkin mixture.
Spice up yo life!
Remove from heat.

Smear pesto and pumpkin-cranberry goo onto baguette slices.
Devour.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Sourdough Starter

I've done it. It happened. Commitment made. I have started my sourdough culture!

That distinct flavor of sourdough bread is due to the lactic and acetic acid that bacteria growing in the sourdough culture produce. Interested in learning more? Read me!

Essentially you mix together equal parts flour and water and since there is yeast on the flour and in the air a culture grows! As long as you "feed" the culture every 8-24 hours you're golden.

I'm following this video (the guy is pretty goofy...):


I'm a little nervous because I'm using whole wheat flour from Earnst Farms and the dude is using white flour. I'm wondering if that will screw up the flour to water ratio? I guess we'll see!

Sourdough Starter Day #1

Here's a pretty interesting article on the health benefits of sourdough bread.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Guest Blogger: (continued) Thanksgiving

I wanted to share some recipes with you this Thanksgiving and to tell you how much I enjoy cooking, especially for and with other people I cherish. Samantha and I made miso soup for breakfast the other day, on a misty weekend morning, and it was a beautiful morning indeed. I feel like cooking can be a very intimate experience, especially because taste and smell are so primal, and also because you want to make sure that the people you are cooking for enjoy what you've made for them. Food for me is primarily about sharing. At the same time, as students, it is easy to forget that food can taste good, and it doesn't need to be elaborate. In any case, just like Samantha, I take food seriously.

I come from a family of people that love to eat and cook - my parents and sister are amazing cooks. I have learned much of what I know from them. Also, being Indian, cooking is something I tend to feel out - recipes serve only as a baseline (except in baking, when proportions really do matter for things like developing the right amount of gluten in bread dough or fluffiness of muffins). Proportions are tinkered with. If you asked me how many teaspoons of turmeric I add to a pot of fried okra, I honestly couldn't tell you. Cooking can and should be creative - we all have different tastes, and it is fun to explore and expand your own tastes as well. Also, I think that it is important to imagine what things taste like - this will allow you cook in your mind, and make changes that you think will make things different or suit your tastes.

Here are some things I made for my friends (and myself!) this Thanksgiving. I found a great list of Thanksgiving recipes on Well's Vegetarian Thanksgiving on the New York Times website. All of these recipes were made trash-free, too! Here's what I made, and my thoughts on them. The NYTimes website calls for what is in black, and any changes/substitutions/additions I made are in green or the NYTimes ingredient is struck through:

1) Pumpkin dumplings (with my own addition of onion apple topping)


1 15-ounce can pure pumpkin puree (I had a can of this from a year ago, before I started my no-trash project, and so I used it. You can easily make your own pumpkin puree by peeling a pie pumpkin, steaming it, and then blending it)
2 large eggs, lightly beaten
1 cup store-bought gluten-free flour blend (I used flour with gluten)
Salt
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil (Don't be shy - you can definitely use more oil than this. I love oil.)
1 medium onion, finely chopped
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
1 small head radicchio, sliced into 1/4-inch strips (about 2 cups)
2 tablespoons chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley (I used dried parsley)
Two apples - they can be tart or sweet...whatever you'd like! You can also use pears.

Preparation
1. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. In a large bowl, combine the pumpkin puree, eggs, flour and 1 teaspoon salt to make the dough.
2. In a large saucepan, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the onion and red pepper flakes and cook until softened, about five minutes; remove from the heat and set aside. I added apples to this to give it an added fall flavour. 
 
3. When the water comes to a boil, use a teaspoon to scoop up the dough and form a dumpling, then carefully slide the dumpling off the spoon and into the boiling water. Continue forming dumplings until half the dough is used. Cook until the dumplings float, then simmer for about two minutes; remove with a slotted spoon and add to the saucepan with the onion. Repeat with the remaining dumpling dough. Don't worry if the dumplings break slightly and make the water murky. That is totally fine!
4. Return the saucepan with the onion to medium-high heat. Toss in three-quarters of the radicchio and stir gently until just wilted, about two minutes; season with 1/2 teaspoon salt or to taste. To serve, divide the dumplings and sauce among four bowls and top with the remaining radicchio and parsley.
Yield: Serves 4.

I think that this recipe could have used some more spices and/or herbs in the dumplings (to satisfy my Indian taste buds), but I also appreciated the simplicity of tastes with the NYTimes recipe.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2) Roasted Vegetable Galette with Olives
Crust:
1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup whole-wheat pastry flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt (could definitely use more salt)
1/3 cup water (needed a few splashes more than this to make the dough come together)
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 cup finely chopped pitted Kalamata olives
-----------------------------------
Filling:
1 1/2 cups diced peeled carrots (3 medium)
1 1/2 cups diced peeled parsnips (3 medium) I used Daikon radish instead
1 1/2 cups diced peeled butternut squash (1/2 medium)
1 cup diced peeled beet (1 medium) I used both red beets and golden beets
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided (definitely used more than this)
2 teaspoons chopped fresh rosemary or 1/2 teaspoon dried (didn't have this and so I think I used some oregano instead, although you could also use sage, thyme, ginger, lavender, black pepper or paprika, I'd say)
1/2 teaspoon salt, or to taste
Freshly ground pepper to taste
1 head garlic
1 cup crumbled creamy goat cheese (4 ounces), divided (It is hard to find goat cheese without packaging)
1 egg mixed with 1 tablespoon water for glazing
You can definitely add in or substitute in various kinds of potatoes, peppers or squashes. Express yourself through your choices.

Preparation
1. To prepare crust: Combine all-purpose flour, whole-wheat flour, baking powder, sugar and salt in a food processor; pulse several times. Mix water and oil; sprinkle over the dry ingredients and pulse just until blended. Add olives and pulse to mix. (Alternatively, combine dry ingredients in a large bowl. Make a well in the center and add the water-oil mixture, stirring until well blended. Stir in olives.) I did this by hand. When you make doughs, it is important to know what they feel like. I also added a few hand fulls of water to make the dough come together at this point.
2. Press the dough into a disk; if it seems dry, add a little more water. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 30 minutes or longer. The unbaked crust will keep, well wrapped, in the refrigerator for up to 2 days.
3. Meanwhile, preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. Coat a large baking sheet with cooking spray. Just use some oil to coat the sheet.
4.To prepare filling: Combine carrots, parsnips, squash, beet (or whatever else you added or substituted), 1 tablespoon oil, rosemary, salt and pepper in a large bowl; toss to coat. Spread the vegetables on the prepared baking sheet. Cut the tip off the head of garlic. Set on a square of foil, sprinkle with a tablespoon of water and pinch the edges of the foil together. Place the packet on the baking sheet with the vegetables. Roast, stirring the vegetables every 10 minutes, until they are tender and beginning to brown and the garlic is soft, about 35 minutes. (The garlic may take a little longer.)
5. Transfer the vegetables to a bowl. Unwrap the garlic and let cool slightly. Squeeze the garlic cloves into a small bowl; add the remaining 1 tablespoon oil and mash with a fork. Add the mashed garlic to the roasted vegetables and toss to mix. Add 3/4 cup goat cheese and toss to coat.
6. To assemble galette: Roll the dough into a rough 14-inch circle about 1/4 inch thick. Coat a baking sheet with cooking spray and place the dough on it. Arrange the roasted vegetables on the dough, leaving a 2-inch border all around. Fold the border up and over the filling to form a rim, pleating as you go. Scatter the remaining 1/4 cup goat cheese over the vegetables. Stir egg and water briskly; brush lightly over the crust. (It would make it look nice, the egg glazing, but I totally forgot to do this!)
7. Bake the galette at 400 degrees until the crust is golden, 30 to 35 minutes. Let cool for 10 minutes. Serve warm.
Yield: Makes 8 servings.
This was so good. Again, I'd add more salt to the crust, and you can also try to add some herbs/spices to the crust.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alsatian Pear and Apple Kugel with Prunes

5 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 pounds ripe Bosc pears You can also use D'Anjou or any other pear
an apple or two
2 small onions (about 1/2 pound), peeled and cut into 1-inch dice
Salt to taste
1/2 loaf bread (about 7 ounces), cubed
3/4 cup sugar
8 tablespoons butter or pareve margarine, melted I just used vegetable oil instead of butter. It is hard to find trash-free butter. And if you notice cake recipes, they are just full of oil!
2 large eggs
2 cups pitted prunes
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Juice of 1 lemon

Preparation
1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9-inch springform pan with 2 tablespoons of the oil.
2. Peel the pears and cut all but one of them into 1-inch cubes. Don't peel the pears - their skin is already delicate. I did peel the apple though.
3. Heat the remaining 3 tablespoons of the oil over a medium-high heat in a skillet. Lightly sauté the onions until they are translucent. Remove from the heat and salt lightly, allowing them to cool slightly.
4. Soak the bread for a few seconds in lukewarm water and squeeze dry. Put in a large bowl, and, using a wooden spoon or spatula, mix with 1/4 cup of the sugar and the butter or pareve margarine oil. Stir in the eggs, onions and half of the diced pears, setting aside the remaining pears for the sauce.
5. Pour the batter into the spring form pan and bake for 2 1 hour 40 minutes or so hours.
6. While the kugel is cooking, make the sauce. In a heavy saucepan set over medium-high heat, put 1 cup of water, the remaining 1/2 cup of sugar, the prunes, cinnamon, lemon juice and the remaining diced pears. Cook this compote mixture uncovered for 30 minutes.
7. Finely grate the remaining pear and stir it into the cooked compote. (I didn't grate the pear, although this would have been better. I thought that the pear would disintegrate, just like apples do when you boil them. I was wrong! No harm done, though)
8. When the kugel is done, remove from the oven and set on a rack to cool for about 20 minutes. Unmold from the pan onto a serving platter, and spoon half of the compote over it. Serve the remaining compote on the side.
Yield: 6 to 8 servings.

The onions give this an extremely savoury taste - very different than what we expect cake-like things to be. I loved it.

~Love,
Darshan

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Sesame Spelt Crackers

Go oven, go!


Sesame Spelt Crackers
Another great recipe from smitten kitchenHow can a mixture of not much more than flour and water taste so good??
Crispy!
Ingredients:
1.5 c spelt flour
1/4 t salt
1/2 c cold water
salt, garlic powder, sesame seeds, other toppings of your choice (poppy seeds, onion powder, dried herbs...)


Directions:
Preheat oven to 350F
Mix salt and water.
Stir flour into water mixture.
Knead dough a few times.
Flour an upside-down cookie sheet.*
Roll dough out on floured surface AS THIN AS POSSIBLE.
Brush dough with water and prick with a fork.
Sprinkle on toppings and gently press them into the dough.
Lightly cut into desired cracker shapes (for easy breakage).
Bake until golden brown and crispy, around 20 minutes.


*I had a bit of trouble getting the crackers off of the cookie sheet. Next time I think I will roll the dough out on parchment paper instead.