Thursday, November 25, 2010

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Shiitake bacon

I have a new favourite fake bacon: shiitake bacon.
I got the idea from the PPK, in its new home here. Following a suggestion in that thread, I used dried, pre-sliced shiitakes. I reconstituted them with the barest amount of hot water, plus oil, liquid smoke, smoked paprika and salt. I think they were in the oven for about 30 minutes -- after about 15 minutes they were smelling really good, and I kept checking on them every 5 minutes to make sure they didn't burn. In the end there was a nice mixture of crispy and chewy textures.

The shiitake bacon found its way into some amazing VBLATs (vegan bacon lettuce avocado tomato). You know the fake bacon is good when it can upstage avocado in a sandwich.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Green tomatoes

One of my tomato plants died. It was the biggest one, with green tomatoes all over that I'd been eyeing for weeks, and then it was suddenly struck down with a disease (fusarium wilt, I believe).

I harvested all the green tomatoes. I'd never tried them before, but green tomatoes are tasty! We had fried green tomatoes, and on Friday (which reached 38 or 39 degrees C -- that's 100 F) we had gazpacho with red and green tomatoes. But maybe the best meal was this one: roasted green tomatoes with tempeh, based on this recipe for chicken.
Looking at the recipe now, I see that I forgot the basil. But it was delicious anyway, and I really loved the combination of the tomatoes with ginger. The tempeh worked out pretty well. I had marinated it in a sort of all purpose marinade (soy sauce/oil/lemon juice, I think). I had to add some of the marinade part way through cooking because it was starting to dry out.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Liege waffles

Recently in a conversation with R about waffles, I promised I'd make him the best waffles ever. And so I finally got around to trying gaufres de Liege (Liege waffles). They're like brioche, but cooked in a waffle iron. The dough is full of pearl sugar, which melts and crisps on the outside. Delicious!

Veganizing notes: I used the recipe linked above, replacing the butter with vegan margarine, and the egg with a pinch of lecithin and some vital wheat gluten (I got the lecithin and gluten tips from Parsnip Parsimony's post on brioche).

Sidenote: if anyone can tell me why lecithin is so widely available here, I'd love to know. Seriously, it's in every supermarket's health food section. I don't think I ever noticed it in the US. The pack I bought suggests sprinkling it on cereal, soup or salad as a 'pleasant addition'. If I'm going to be sprinkling some strange granules on my cereal, I want the packet to be selling me on how awesome it's going to taste, or what miraculous things it's going to do for my health. The mere promise of pleasantness doesn't really do it for me. (Plus, I tasted some, and... NOT TASTY.)

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Kale Salad!


I've seen these really beautiful kale salad posts on SmittenKitchen and 101Cookbooks, but my version is sort of a hack's salad with lots of whatever in it (like a regular salad). This one has wild rice with roasted butternut squash, dried cherries, feta, almonds, and raisins. The wild rice-squash mixture is actually a pilaf I made, so it has onions in there too... but I've had this for lunch now two days in a row, and with a slice of German seeded rye bread, it's superb.

Seeduction

Our big natural food grocery store sells this bread called "Seeduction," which isn't vegan (I think it has an egg wash at least, and maybe some honey), but it is mighty tasty. They make these little rolls, too, which are perfect for sandwiches. This is a leftovers lunch that I photographed because I thought it was such a brilliant use of the little bits in my fridge/freezer.
While I was making it, I had the unfortunate experience to say something that immediately made me think of Homer Simpson. Okay, here it is: "I loooove mayonnaise." So there.

Toast the Oats and Pecans

I made the oatmeal raisin cookies from the book I always attribute to "Peter Barley," The Modern Vegetarian. I used 1c oats and 1c pecans, and toasted them, as he suggests, for 10 minutes before pulsing them. (Half the oat/nut mix is pulsed into a fine powder, half is roughly cut.)
These are FINE cookies. Even better, methinks, because I added chocolate to them. I couldn't resist.

Aussie Yogurt?

Forgive the dramatic sun/shade, but is it true? Do you have your own yogurt Down Under?