Archive for April, 2010

The Best Stuffing Ever!

April 29th, 2010

In our Raw Foods Class this week we were talking holidays. Our tasting included one of my all time favorite recipes from one of my all time favorite sites. I love this for the holidays and it is my main part of the meal and I leave the table feeling full of holiday cheer!

Holiday Stuffing Fantasy is the title of the recipe by Joz on Raw Freedom Community. It is hands down a winner. I love it paired with Sioux’s Waldorf Salad or Cranberry Apple Relish in Eating Without Heating when cranberries are in season.

Ingredients:
1 1/2 c. soaked almonds
4 stalks celery, chopped
1 apple, chopped
1/2 onion, chopped
2 large cloves garlic
1 medium portobello mushroom
3 TBS flax meal
1 TBS Nama Shoyu soy sauce
1/2 tsp sea salt
1 tsp salt-free Spike
1/4 bunch fresh sage, minced or 1/2 tsp dried
1/4 bunch fresh thyme, minced or 1/2 tsp dried
1/4 tsp kelp powder
1/2 c. raisins
1/4 c. chopped walnuts

Soak almond 8 hours or overnight. Drain well and rinse.
Place almonds in food processor and puree until they become meal.
Add onion and garlic. Process until well minced.
Add apple and process to small chunks.
Remove ingredients from food processor and place in large bowl. Add the rest of the ingredients to the bowl and mix well.
Make into a loaf or patties and dehydrate at 105 degrees until crunchy on the outside and moist on the inside about 8-12 hours.

It is well worth adding the fresh herbs to the dish. They really add a lot of fresh flavor and look pretty. Instead of Braggs, I always use wheat free tamari and in place of the Spike, I use Herbamare. Otherwise, I follow the recipe as is.

I like this dish warm or cold right out of the fridge. Really I like this dish here, there or anywhere! I will often double the recipe because it tends to go rather quickly in my house. It will also freeze just fine if you want to stash some away for later.

Happy Holidays!

satisfying sprouts

April 28th, 2010

We have been enjoying the process (and taste!) of growing sprouts at our house. We are all amazed at how quickly changes happen with our plant babies, and my babies love to devour our tender greens. We have been growing 4 trays, and find that it just about gives us a week’s worth of yum until our next trays come on board. We’re still refining the process, as the peas grow faster at first, though the buckwheat catches up pretty quickly, and sunflowers lag behind. Next week I’ll try staggering their starts, but for now I’m still starting the soak at the same time.

I snapped a shot of all four of the trays that we showed the planting process so that you can see what they looked like when we took the covers off. In retrospect, I would have left the covers on the sunflower a little longer, as these sleepy sprouts took a long time to cast off their little black caps and come out to play in the sunshine. But even so, they managed nicely and are now ready for the table.

First up, we have the buckwheat.

You can see the yellowish color, no green since I’d just taken the lid off and they’d been in total darkness until now. You can also see the white fuzzy roots that are often mistaken for mold — I had read about this, so while I watched it carefully, I was not quick to give up on them, and as it turns out, the book was right! These are just the tiny hairs on the roots, and not some nasty fungus that doomed my little crop.

They greened up pretty quickly, but I didn’t snap a picture until a few days later, when most of them had cast off their seed hull of their own accord and peeked out over the sides of the tray.

I love the way this picture shows our buckwheat babies emerging from the sunlight in their sunny southern window. This reminds me of something I read once about plants, about eating plants is like eating sunlight. I still am agog at the fact that plants convert sunlight into tangible energy. Just think what we could do for our energy crisis if we could figure that one out! Anyway, what I’d come across was something to the effect of that:  plants covert sunlight into plant matter, so by eating raw, unadulterated plants we are in a way eating sunlight.  Now back to our regularly scheduled program…

The other two seeds we’d started that day were sunflower and peas — here they are the day I took the cover off:

Sunflowers on the left, probably could have used another day or so in the dark. Peas on the right have 2 inch or so shoots that are ready to green up. Lucia pointed out that the pea shoots grow up out of the pea, which stays on the soil surface. The buckwheat and sunflowers grow different, carrying their seed coats up with them  until the shoot is strong enough to cast them off.

Here’s a shot of the pea shoots one day after the above pic — look how much greener and taller:

I haven’t captured a “final stage” pic of the sprouts yet, guess I’m too busy eating them! But you can get a sense of what the pea and sunflower sprouts look like in our dinner from last night. We’ve talked about incorporating more raw foods into your diet by just adding one meal a day (usually starting with breakfast, choosing a smoothie or fruit instead of bagel or cereal), then two, and then having more raw food as sides at dinner. Last night’s dinner is a good example of this. I was trying out some relatively new dishes, so I defrosted some lentil soup and heated that up, knowing that Dante and Lucia would at the very least eat that.

So I got out some collards, destemmed and cut them in half, and whipped up some tangy carrot salad, or a variation thereof.  This has been a favorite recently — it’s quick to come together and can be made from stuff I usually have on hand, leaving out what I don’t and adding in what I do. I chop the nuts and leave them separate so that they aren’t soggy in the leftovers. I put these out as a little craft project at the dinner table — and Dante at a whole carrot-salad-filled collard wrap as part of his dinner. The first few times I made this salad, he ate a bite and said he didn’t like it. Granted, each time I’ve made it I’ve had different things on hand, but this time he ate it. So there’s something to be said for continuing to serve things and waiting for appreciation to come after many tries.

I’d made the cream sauce for the sprouts before I shredded the carrots in the food processor, and since Lucia wanted to try the sauce I gave her a bowl of carrot shreds with some sauce drizzled on it. I added an extra clove of garlic to the sauce (who’s surprised? anyone? anyone?) so it was packin some heat, but both she and her brother ended up eating a small bowl of this as part of their dinner.

And in addition to carrot wraps and lentil soup, I served a big bed of pea and sunflower sprouts with velvety smooth cream sauce. Oh my. It was delicious! Lucia at first asked for a bowl of plain sprouts, but after finishing her carrots, she asked for cream sauce on them as well. And in fact, I just drizzled some on since I knew she found the sauce to be spicy, and she demanded more — nearly double! I loved the texture and flavor of this dish, but we all agreed that we felt slightly rabbit-like, sucking a forkful of sprouts in as we chewed, so next time I will probably chop the sprouts up a bit before serving, or serve them with a knife so people can chop their own.

Can’t rave enough about the sprouts — and they’re soo kid-friendly too on many levels. Definitely consider giving them a try so that by next winter you’re comfortable with the process and are ready to have fresh, local greens all winter long!

Happy sprouting!

i love almond flour

April 27th, 2010

A couple of months ago I heard an interview on WNPR’s Faith Middleton show with Elana Amsterdam (you can listen here), the author of the The Gluten-Free Almond Flour Cookbook (a great deal — around $10! And has recipes for savory dishes as well. I looked on Amazon and found some of the recipes in the free preview, so we tried the blueberry banana muffins. We have cut wheat out of our diets and I must say I’m not the biggest fan of many of the substitutes. It’s lovely to have an alternative, but I find the flavor on some to be a turn off. So it was with absolute delight that we gobbled down the entire batch of muffins in one sitting! They came out a little dark because I turned them off when the timer went off, but thought they needed more time. At which point I forgot allllll about them. Oops. But they didn’t burn, and were still moist and tasty, just a little browner than necessary.

birthday cake for my little fairyFor Lucia’s birthday this past week, she wanted a vanilla cake with pink frosting, so I turned once again to this book, which I was able to get from the library! I made the vanilla cupcake recipe (I followed the one that has a surprise inside, since it was a little different than the other), using a 6 inch and 8 1/2 inch springform pans. I baked it for about 22 minutes for the 6 inch and almost 30 minutes for the larger pan, covering it after about 18 minutes once the top had browned so that it wouldn’t burn while the center cooked. The texture, while more dense than a white flour wheat cake, was still moist and light and the flavor — absolutely delicious!

I frosted it with the same cashew-based frosting that I used for the raw lemon poppy seed cake, but added a half a bag of defrosted frozen strawberries to it for flavor and color (it was a nice medium pink, the flash bleached it out). This made the frosting a little too runny, but if I’d drained the berries or whizzed the strawberries in ahead of time and let it sit, it would have thickened (I had leftovers in the fridge that did so). After frosting the bottom layer, I put chopped strawberries on before adding the second tier.

I also took some frozen bananas and strawberries and made pink ice cream — a hit with all the kids. I served this cake to my family, who eat a primarily standard American diet, and didn’t have to compost any pieces left on plates, except for the scraps of my nephew’s second piece. An impressive feat for no wheat!

I liked the tanginess of the frosting offseting the sweetness a bit, but Lucia wants round two (cupcakes with friends this week) to not be so lemony. And we’re going to try the chocolate cake AND chocolate frosting recipe from that book for the cupcakes as well. I can’t wait!

We have also made the pancakes, and while it took me a few tries to get the heat right (keep it low low low!) the pancakes themselves were light, fluffy and scrumptious! You should see them puff when you flip them — the kids oohed and ahhed upon viewing this phenomenon.

Using low heat (and I mean 3 or 4 on my stove) means it takes longer to cook them, but I popped the oven on warm and kept the done pancakes in the oven. Or I would have. If my children hadn’t insisted on eating them all and lining up at the stove performing a constant chorus of “Is it done yet?” I also halfway through the process started putting a lid on the frying pan to keep the heat in and make sure the middle cooked, although using the low heat helped with this as well. (Before I figured this out, they were dark brown on the outside and gooey inside.)

And last night we made the chocolate chip cookies. Lucia’s review: “Hey! These taste just like the junky ones!” What more can you ask for? Well, Luke asked for me to add some shredded coconut and chopped almonds next time, or maybe a maple walnut version, or a cranberry pecan version, or… well, you get the idea. We are delighted to have found a delicious way to make baked goods without gluten flours.

Elena’s Chocolate Chip Cookies

  • 2 1/2 cups blanched almond flour
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 cup grapeseed oil
  • 1/2 cup agave nectar
  • 1 Tbs vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup coarsely chopped dark chocolate
  1. Preheat oven to 350, line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper.
  2. In a large bowl, combine dry ingredients, including chocolate.
  3. In a medium bowl, whisk together oil, agave and vanilla.
  4. Stir wet into dry until thoroughly combined.
  5. Regrigerate dough 2o minutes.
  6. Spoon 1 heaping Tbs at a time onto sheets, pressing down with your palm to flatten.
  7. Bake 8-10 minutes until lightly golden.

I used maple syrup and honey instead of agave, coconut oil instead of grapeseed and didn’t refrigerate the dough, due to the puss-in-boots eyes on my cookie monsters that demanded cookies asap! We actually baked and cooled them while we ate, and had them for dessert after cleaning the kitchen from dinner. YUM YUM YUM. We imagined dunking them in almond milk, so we’ve got some almond soaking for the next batch tomorrow.We’ve had a long break from baked goods and are making up for lost time!

So now you’re wondering “Where on earth do I get this almond flour?” Well, the Bob’s Red Mill almond flour that you can get at most grocery stores  is allegedly too coarse a grind for these recipes, and gives a grittier, less cake-like texture. I bought mine from Lucy’s Kitchen Shop. I called and placed the order — it took less than 2 minutes to do so and I had my flour in 3 days.  It’s well worth the price for the occasional baked treat, and keeps well in the fridge or freezer. Elana also recommends some other sources (as well as other inspirational recipes and ideas on her blog Elana’s Pantry.

Happy baking!

lemon poppyseed cake

April 26th, 2010

One of Dante’s favorite cakes is a lemon poppyseed cake, and when I stumbled across a raw version on the sunny raw kitchen, I was intrigued. Having found some good-looking jicama at the store the week before the last raw potluck, I decided to take the plunge. Lucia, assisting in the kitchen, kept stealing chunks of jicama to snack on. If you haven’t had it before, I’d describe it as an apple and pear having gotten together with the texture of raw potato. It’s sweet with a firm, pleasant crunch. She likes it best cut into sticks. Lots of raw recipes give this as an alternative to french fries and serve it with a raw ketchup. I don’t know about that, but it’s delicious in its own right.

Many raw desserts are heavy due to to the reliance on nuts and seeds. The beauty of this recipe is that the jicama cuts that density, and if you use the almond pulp, that heaviness is cut even more. We were out all afternoon before the party, so this cake had to sit in the car in a cooler on a hot spring day, and was decorated last minute, not as pretty as I’d have liked. But boy did it deliver in flavor what it lacked in panache! Sweet lemony goodness. Delicious.  (see pics of this cake at sunny raw kitchen or raw freedom community for more aesthetically pleasing versions)

Lemon Poppy Seed Cake
Slightly modified version by Anna of TheRawTable.com, as featured in the Purely Delicious magazine of Fall 2007

Cake:

  • 2 cups jicama, peeled and cubed
  • 1 green apple, peeled, seeded and chopped
  • 3 cups dehydrated almond pulp from making milk
  • OR 2 cups almonds soaked, dehydrated and finely ground
  • 1/4 cup golden flax seeds, finely ground
  • 3/4 cup agave nectar
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 large lemon, juiced
  • 2 generous tsp lemon zest
  • 2 tbs psyllium husks
  • 1/2 tsp sea salt
  • 1/4 cup poppy seeds
  1. Place all ingredients in food processor and blend until everything is finely chopped and moving freely.
  2. Press one half of the mixture in the bottom of a springform pan, smoothing edges and evening the sides as much as possible.
  3. Reserve the rest for later.

Lemon Coconut Frosting

  • 2 cups cashews
  • 1 1/2 whole lemons (seeds removed)
  • 3 or 4 tbs coconut butter
  • 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup agave nectar
  • 3-4 tbs water
  • Pinch of sea salt
  1. Place all ingredients in high speed blender and process until smooth.
  2. Frost bottom layer of cake and allow to freeze for 4-6 hours.
  3. Top with remaining cake mixture and gently press, again smoothing edges and evening the sides.
  4. Return to freezer for an additional 2 hours.
  5. Remove from spring form pan and frost either top or sides or both with remaining frosting. Garnish with extra poppy seeds.

Aside from swapping agave for honey, I followed this recipe precisely. Oh, and I didn’t have a spring form cake pan that would work, so I used a tart pan and did it all in one layer.  My family loved this cake and I would definitely make it again. It was easy enough and can be made ahead of time, which again is a nice bonus. It firmed up nicely, despite the lack of proper refrigeration for hours before serving.

I also used this frosting for Lucia’s birthday cake this past week. She wanted pink frosting, so I added some frozen strawberries to it. It was lovely and if I hadn’t made the frosting at the last minute, it would have set nicely. If you decide to add berries to color or flavor this frosting, you might want to put the berries in a strainer over a bowl for a little while, because the texture was a bit too runny. However, the frosting I didn’t use had set into a nice consistency overnight. Drained or made ahead of time, this frosting is an excellent, nutritious substitution for dairy and white sugar versions. It’s really lemony, but you can definitely adjust that to your taste.

The next time we make this cake, I plan to serve it with a berry sauce — berries whizzed in a blender or food processor with or without a little honey as needed. It would also be delicious with fresh fruit chopped up and drizzled with honey until it releases it’s juices… as the fresh berry and fruit season approaches, I can’t WAIT to explore the possibilities. And this recipe will definitely figure in my plans.

Enjoy!

Coconut White Cake

April 23rd, 2010

I am a chocolate lover but my kids, not so much. Don’t get me wrong, they are not one to turn down a piece of dark chocolate or raw fudge but as for cake they like white cake better. I like variety and well, I just like cake!

This week, I made the Boutenko’s Wedding Cake out of Eating Without Heating. I call it a coconut white cake because it is very heavy with coconut and I find this prepares the taster for not cooked white cake but they know a little more what to expect. I made one full recipe for our Raw Food class and a half recipe to make a small cake for our family. River jumped right in to help with the middle layer and then off to play. Gatlin hung around and helped decorate. I really love having the kids in the kitchen. It is such a sweet bit of quality time sharing laughs and yummy tastes as well as being able to teach them practical applications of math with measuring, nutrition and how to make food itself.

Coconut White Cake

Crust:
2 cups raw tahini (easy to make homemade)
4 cups dry, shredded coconut
1/2 tsp. salt

Mix together well and use for the layers of the cake.

Frosting:
1 cup cashews
2 TBS raw honey
1 tsp. vanilla extract (the original recipe calls for mint extract)
1/4 cup fresh coconut butter
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 cup water

Blend all ingredients in vitamix. I soak th cashews 4 hours and they are even softer and of course healthier. Use as little water as possible to have a thick, creamy spreadable frosting.

Put half the crust on a plate and form into desired shape. Next, layer with fruit. I like banana in the middle. It gives a super creamy texture kind of like that pudding layer for cooked white cake.
On a second plate, form the second part of the crust and gently slide it onto the top crust. Frost the cake and decorate wildly!

It is a beautiful cake to be able to decorate so be extra creative. With the last cakes I made, I will say, Gatlin won the prize for best decorated. We were both using the same fruits to decorate and had very different ideas. Fantastic!

apple crumble

April 22nd, 2010

So on with another dessert — a quick-to-make and easy-to-adapt recipe that is one of our favorites. I first made this recipe two summers ago inspired by something I found on goneraw.com (haven’t been able to find this one on there since, so no link, sorry). I used fresh, local peaches with the same crumble topping and oh my GOSH was it delicious! I have since made it with berries, cherries, pears, apples and plums. All have been scrumptious, but peach and cherry vie for first place for me personally. The cherry blossom petals are snowing my backyard, which means it’s not too long til cherry picking time! Yay spring!

Another beautiful quality of this dish, aside from versatility and quick prep, is that it can be made last minute with things I tend to have on hand. And honestly — why limit it to a dessert — it makes a very fine breakfast, lunch or snack as well. Not to mention that having a jar of both parts of the recipe (fruit as well as crumble topping) means you can add a new dimension to banana ice cream, chocolate mousse, banana pudding and more.

Oh, and did I mention that you can also make it ahead of time, keeping the crumble separate from the fruit until ready to serve. This makes it a great holiday dish when you have other things to do last minute besides worry about dessert. Seriously, what more could you want from a delicious dish!? I had stored some apple filling in a small metal tiffin, so I dumped this out into a plate and it held it’s shape. So I put crumb topping around it instead of on top for the picture. It’s much prettier with some sort of berry or cherry, but hey, looks aren’t everything, right?

Better than Betty’s Apple Crumble

Crumb mixture:

  • 2 cups walnuts
  • 2 cups pecans
  • 1 cup dates
  • 2 tsp vanilla
  • 1 Tbs honey
  • cinnamon to taste
  • pinch salt
  1. Pulse nuts in food processor until smallish — if you take it down to a flour at this stage your crumble will have a different, more cohesive, dough like texture, less crumbly. Not a bad thing, still delicious, just a different feel.
  2. Add remaining ingredients and process just until the dates are broken down. Pour out into a bowl or storage container if you aren’t serving immediately.  I don’t bother cleaning out the food processor bowl, as this comes out without leaving much residue, so on to the fruit without further ado.

Apple delight:

  • 4 lbs apples, cored
  • 1/2 cup raisins
  • 1 Tbs honey
  • cinnamon to taste
  • 1/2 banana
  1. I chopped my apples into 1 inch cubes or so. Well, actually, I quartered the apples (a mixture of green, braeburn and pink lady) and tossed all but 3 of them into the processor. And couldn’t get my Cuisinart to process them — the chunks were too big, and the blade just couldn’t get to most of them. So, I dumped out half and cut it all into smaller pieces and was able to get it to process.
  2. After the apples were almost pureed, I put in the rest of the ingredients. I added the half banana because it seemed like it needed something to give it a bit of creaminess as well as sweetness to balance the tartness of the green apples I used. I would consider adding a whole banana next time, but this one was really ripe, thus intensely flavored, and I didn’t want to taste banana when I ate it.
  3. Once the puree was all set, I scraped that out into a bowl and added small pieces of the 3 remaining apples to the processor. I pulsed until these were what looked like a good size (small enough to chew politely but big enough to give my teeth something to do) and then mixed them into the puree.
  4. The nuts will get soggy if you mix this ahead of time, so I like to serve it in two bowl and let people take the amount of crumble they want right at the table.

I think you can easily make this recipe without the honey, using whole food sweeteners like the dates, raisins and bananas. The original recipe called for a tablespoon of coconut oil in the fruit mixture, but I tend to leave that out. I bet coconut butter would also  be delicious — especially if you use mango, papaya, pineapple, strawberry or a combination of those for the fruit.

I also occasionally add a couple tablespoons of hemp, chia or ground flax to the crumble once it’s been processed to boost the nutrition. I’ve been adding hemp seeds to guacamole — Dante and Lucia haven’t noticed and I feel good knowing I’m getting lots of healthy fats, vitamins and minerals, and protein into something they love to eat. Make sure you have enough dates or dried fruit going on in the crumble to absorb these extra dry ingredients if you choose to do so.

We use organic apples, so I just wash them and leave the skins on — if you haven’t had a chance to see the Shopper’s Guide to Pesticide to know which fruits and vegetables contain high levels of pesticide residue even after washing, head on over to our post about limiting chemicals in your home.

Happy crumbling!

banana cream pie

April 17th, 2010

It’s dessert week for our workshop, and I’m kicking it off with Alissa Cohen’s recipe for Ann Wigmore’s Banana Cream Pie. I forgot to take pics before we served the pie, so you’ll just have to fill in the rest with your imagination.

Ann Wigmore’s Banana Cream Pie (from Alissa Cohen)

Crust:

  • 1/2 cup pecans
  • 2 cups dates, pitted and soaked
  • 1 1/2 cup dried coconut
  • 1 tsp vanilla

Filling:

  • 4-5 bananas
  • 1 cup shredded coconut
  • 1/2 cup apple juice
  • 2 tsp tahini
  • 2 tsp honey
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  1. Grind pecans in food processor til fine.
  2. Add dates and blend til creamy. I think the dough came out too wet, and would probably not soak the dates next time around.
  3. Add remaining crust ingredients, and blend well. Sabrina had made this for raw potluck once, and recommended cutting the coconut to a scant cup. Since I’m not a coconut lover, I took this advice. Also, I’m reading David Wolfe’s Superfoods, and in the chapter about Maca he recommends using it to help bind crusts made from dried fruit and nuts, so I put 2 Tbs of maca into the crust as well.
  4. Pour into pie place or springform tart pan and chill while you make the filling.
  5. Add 4 bananas and remaining filling ingredients to food processor and process. I used an apple instead of the 1/2 cup apple juice. I also added a 1 Tbs of flax meal, and 1 Tbs of psyllium husk because I didn’t have a lot of time to chill the pie and wanted to make sure it was firm.
  6. Pour filling into a bowl, and cut remaining banana and stir. Pour filling into crust and chill in fridge.
  7. Just before serving, decorate the top with extra banana slices, cacao nibs, various seeds, berries, dried fruit, etc.

I took this pie to a family birthday party so I could have a sweet treat, but surprisingly many of the other guests tried it. None was left on the plates, except a particularly thick portion of crust. My kids liked it, but preferred the filling, so I will probably just make banana pudding for them in the future and save the pie for something special. Easy peasy wholesome dessert treat! One half went at the party, and my family gobbled the rest of it for breakfast the following day. Mmmmm pie for breakfast!

Maca is a root vegetable found high in the Andes of Peru. Consumption of the maca root powder is shown to strengthen the immune system, increase energy, and  improve memory, endurance and libido. It is also an adaptogen, helping to relieve stress and depression. It has a malty flavor, and we like it in nut milk shakes with cacao. YUM!

organization in the raw kitchen

April 16th, 2010

It’s 5:00 pm and time to make dinner. When cooking meals for my family, I can easily scramble and look around for what is in the pantry and fridge and come up with a meal in a decent amount of time. This is not always the case in the raw food kitchen. There is a little bit of planning that needs to happen to create a flow and ease of meal making.

Meal planning is a huge plus! I meal plan as I write my grocery list. This has helped in a few areas of kitchen management. I have a better idea of what is in my kitchen and there is less that gets lost in the depth of the back of the fridge inevitably turning bad and getting tossed to the compost heap. I have a clear list of what is needed at the grocery store as well. From that plan, I write in when I need to soak various things as well. This is a huge help. That way, when I go to make my recipes, I have everything needed and it is ready to go. Soaking time was one of the hardest adjustments for me to make because of having to plan ahead. Make it easy on yourself and at dinner time while you are in the kitchen preparing, start soaking the nuts that require 8 or so hours soak time for recipes you are making the next day. In the morning is when I soak nuts and seeds with shorter times for recipes I am making that day. Getting that down definitely streamlines kitchen prep. 

How much to make? I like to figure out my meals for one weeks worht of time and then I break that down into two days of preparing. I like to make one or two dressings for salad, a dip, a pate and two main meals. I then have on hand sald ingredients that vary week to week to keep things interesting. Doing this helps to cut down on trips to the grocery store. I had found I was going every day to the market and the kids were none too happy with that scenario. Planning in this way has afforded me to go to the market twice a week and produce is fresh and I spend less $$$$ on the whole because of planning ahead of time. Ooooo, and my hubby likes that!

Another consideration for the organized raw kitchen is equipment and food placement. I have my vitamix and food processor out on the counter all the time. This way I do not avoid or delay making a dish because I don’t want to haul out my heavy equipment. It is out and ready. All other tools like knives and cutting boards are in an easy location to grab quick. I keep a large fruit bowl on the counter that the kids can reach and is easily visible. On the lowest shelf of my fridge also lies fruit and cut veggies and dip. When the fridge is opened, the foods they can choose from are right there at eye level. The same goes for the pantry. The lower shelf has snacks like dried fruit and grawnola or museli mix for them to grab. The next shelf up has seaweeds that River often grabs. The point is to make it visible and easy to grab. Also, take note if you are not happy with the foods you or your kids are eating to stop bringing them into the house. If there are only healthy choices, you will be happy with their choices they are making when home. Do make the selections things they like and vary them. Also think of the different fruits and veggies in season and vary your shelves to fit what is available locally and offer lots of color variety.

Keep it fresh! I like to plan to make one (at least) new recipe a week. This gives us variety and can add to our list of recipes we like while not stressing out the kiddos who like to know what to expect most of the time for meals. As you go through this process, keep a folder or notebook or system that works for you with the recipes you love. You may keep a section of recipes to try as well. I write on the recipe like a footnote who in the family liked the dish and any modifications I made or would like to make. If the recipe is not good put it in the recycle bin or mark in the recipe book that you didn’t like it so you don’t waste time again making it later on down the road. In no time at all you will have a fantastic favorites recipe collection to go to for meal planning and when you are feeling at a loss for what to make. Bu please, don’t forget to share!! We love to hear about your favorites!

seeds n sprouts

April 15th, 2010

top down view of buckwheat lettuceIt’s been a while since our field trip to Aiki Farms, but I couldn’t get the sprouts out of my mind. I have been doing jar sprouting of mung beans, peas, lentils, broccoli and alfalfa, but never really gave the process of growing leafy shoots more than a half-hearted try. So I bought some sprouting buckwheat seeds at Garden of Light natural food store in Glastonbury, got out some of the mesclun and spinach containers I’d been saving, and went to town. And ya know what? It was really easy, and the kids LOVED gobbling up the sprouts! We served them atop your standard green salad, by themselves dressed with a dash of balsamic vinegar, in a romaine leaf that was smeared with cashew mayonnaise and rolled up in nori or rice wrappers with shredded carrots, tomato, avocado and EZ Nori Filling or a sweet chili or peanut dipping sauce. I also imagine they’d be a great way to get greens into smoothies without a strong “green” taste!

sprouts on a saladWhy sprout?

  1. Nutrition — sprouts have a greater concentration of vitamins, minerals, protein and phytochemicals than any other period in the plants life — even full grown fruit or vegetables.
  2. Price — pound for pound, sprouts cost less than most other produce (the sproutman calculates them to be on average 26 cents per pound!)
  3. Local and fresh — sprouts stop growing the moment you cut or chew them, and it doesn’t get much more local than that! And nutrients are intact instead of dissipating slowly as produce sits on the store shelves
  4. Organic — no chemicals needed, neither pesticide or fertilizers. Invest in a good organic soil mix (this will pay off in the amount of nutrients your sprouts contain) or mix your own. Aiki Farms uses a mixture of peat moss and composted chicken manure. Find a local organic farmer in your area to see if they can hook you up or know of a good source. What do they use for seed starting?
  5. Easy to digest — The tender cell walls of these baby plants break down more easily than the tougher walls of their mature counterparts, and they contain a higher concentration of enzymes that help break them down, so your system doesn’t have to work as hard.
  6. Easy to grow — growing shoots does require a bit more space, but still not nearly work or space as outdoor gardening. Sprouting lentils, mung beans, etc in a jar takes even less time and space — a minute or two a day to rinse, and whatever space your jar or nut milk bag requires.
  7. Year-round harvest — you can grow sprouts no matter what the temperature is inside or out, ditto the available sunlight. Sprouting may take longer in one season than another, but you can adjust your process and schedule accordingly.  And your jar or nut milk bag is portable, making sprouts an easy travel food — take it with you when visiting family or on camping trips!
  8. Taste — how could I list this last?! Shoots have a very mild taste compared to kale and other dark leafy greens and kids LOVE them! They add a nice, succulent texture to your meals, and the sprouted legumes add a nice crunch to your salads.

Back to technique. I punctured the bottom of the container, placed it on the lid to catch extra water, and spread about 1 inch of soil inside. I watered it with my spray bottle, but that took more time than it was worth and I would probably line them up outside and use the hose with a light spray instead. Once the soil was wet, I sprinkled the seeds on and tried to spread them out evenly.

Not having enough empty cupboard space, I moved them to our laundry room and put them underneath a cardboard box (the tall, awkward shape of the salad container also meant that covering it wasn’t easy. I lifted the box each day to let in a whoosh of fresh air (I was worried about air circulation) and check the progress. After 4 days or so, the shoots were about 2 inches tall, so I brought them into a sunny south window. They greened up really quickly and were ready to harvest a couple of days after exposure to the sun.

Look how green they are! They kept catching my eye as I walked past the room they were in, with their vibrant green glow.  I tried cutting them with scissors, but found it easier to hold the tops of the clump I wanted and cut them free with a short paring knife. I didn’t wash them — they didn’t have any dirt clinging to them or anything, and since you’re leaving the bottom of the stems and the roots in the soil, they’re clean. One thing I’m hoping resolves itself with our new method is the hulls that stay stuck on. My sense is that I hadn’t watered the trays enough or that the covering allowed for them to dry out quicker, so there wasn’t enough moisture and the hulls dried out. Thus hardened, it was more difficult for the plant to shed the hull. We’ll see how it goes in round 2.

The tall sides of the containers made harvesting a bit awkward, so I decided to go out and get some seed-starting tray bottoms at Paul and Sandy’s in East Hampton. They were 1.29 each, and for each tray of sprouts I wanted, I needed 3 of the trays — one on the bottom to catch the water, one punctured and filled with soil and put inside the bottom tray, and one tray to cover the sprouts for the first few days after planting until they are ready for sunlight.

To get ready to put the seeds in soil, I had to soak and then sprout them. I ordered sprouting seeds from sproutman.com, because all I have read on the matter suggests that sprouting seeds are selected for their high germination rate and taste of shoots produced. I measured out what I thought might work (about a cup) and put them on a white kitchen towel to see if there were any stones, twigs, or funky looking seeds. My sprouting bible, The Sprout Garden, says that the Five D’s — Decayed, Diseased, Discolored, Dented and Dwarfed equal DEAD seeds.

After culling (didn’t actually have anything to cull in this batch) and soaked them overnight for about 12 hours. I drained and rinsed the seeds, and then let them sprout for a little over 24 hours, rinsing them 2-3 times a day. The buckwheat and sunflower seeds would start looking dried out before the peas, but I rinsed them all at the same time anyway. Once the seeds were showing evidence of the start of a tail , I gathered my supplies and headed to the deck. The buckwheat was barely showing a tiny sprout, many weren’t but I planted them anyway since I’d read that if you wait too long, it won’t be able to re-orient itself and get a good root into the soil.

punctured seed trayWith a paring knife, I punctured holes in the bottom of 4 of the trays so that water could drain out. I put these inside intact trays, and filled them with about an inch of soil — definitely harder to judge with opaque containers, but I will get to the point that I know how many scoops of dirt are needed per tray so that I don’t waste soil.

Dante presses the soilOnce the soil was in, we put the tops on and used it to press the soil down a bit, again, going on the process we learned at Aiki Farms. We brought the trays onto the lawn and sprayed them with a hose until they were shiny on the surface for a second or two after the hose was pointed elsewhere. We let them sit for a few minutes to drain out an excess water and brought them back up to the deck and added the seeds.

The kids head realized what was going on,  helped with the soil and the watering and were now clamoring once again to do the seeds. So Lucia took the jar of peas and spread them out in one tray. She tried sprinkling them out of the jar evenly, but got frustrated and ended up dumping them all in the middle and spreading them from there.

Lulu plants some peas

We did the same for the sunflower and buckwheat sprouts, filling 3 more trays.

4 trays planted with sprouts!

Now we used our last intact trays as a cover, guarded by a little elf:

covered sprout trays

And brought them into the the house on a table in the playroom:

final resting place of sprout trays

I put a large piece of plastic-ish stuff on the table to protect it in case some water got on it, but will probably figure out a better place for them, since we do like to use that table for crafts and the like.

The whole process took about a half hour, but I had to puncture the trays and take time for kids and pictures, so I expect I will be able to do this in about 10 minutes. Bob from Aiki Farms suggested that 4 trays would make enough sprouts to feed a family of 4 for one week.

I’ll re-post when the covers come off!

compost bins for cheap!

April 14th, 2010

Posting this notice from our local library — one of our very favorite places in town! You don’t have to be a resident of East Hampton to take advantage of this awesome offer, so if you’ve been thinking of getting a composter, here’s a great place to start! There are many ways you can gentle your footprints on the planet, and composting is a major component of that effort. Yard waste and kitchen scraps comprise 30% of landfiill space!So start diverting some of your household’s waste into a valuable product — composted humus!

Compost enriches the soil however you use it — for houseplants, container gardens or full-fledged vegetable gardens. Hummus, the final product of a composting system,  improves the soil structure, increases microorganism populations, helps retain water, provides nutrients that plants need, prevents erosion, help moderate soil temperature… and the list goes on. Start today with a brand spankin new bin designed to prevent animal or insect troubles, and to make harvesting your humus a breeze!

The East Hampton Public Library is collaborating with local agencies and the Northeast Resource Recovery Association (NRRA) to make Earth Machine backyard compost bins available to the public at a competitive and affordable price.

About the Earth Machine
The 80 gallon capacity bin is made of recycled plastic and converts grass, leaves and table scraps into rich garden soil. Other features include easy, snap-together assembly (33″x35″ in finished form) and a 10-year warranty against cracking, deterioration, or warping.

Cost and How to Order
Each Earth Machine may be pre-ordered at a cost of $47; bins usually retail for $80-$100. Price includes CT sales tax and a small fundraiser donation to the library. Head to the library’s blog for more details and to download the order form.

Reduce. Reuse. Recycle!