Sunday, July 29, 2012

Summer Salad

Squash for oven grill and salad
This week I bought some zucchini, yellow squash, yellow peppers and tomatoes. Today, I sliced and diced them into grilled veggies and salad.
To the diced veggies I added one and a half cups of cooked shelled pasta and fresh pressed garlic.
I used one and a half cups of dried pasta and there are two cups of diced veggies before the tomatoes.
Added some sliced hard cooked eggs and dressed with Kraft Bruschetta dressing, cracked pepper and paprika. I think this would easily serve four for a light brunch.

YUM!

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Fermented Green Tomatoes

Fermenting Green Tomatoes
I love posting recipes in a single collage. (I need to find the double click that makes pictures large and larger.)

Let me know how that works for you. It is small so I will include the individual photos below. We already know I have a love of fermenting everything. It has been so hot that my plants are blossoming but not fruiting, or fruiting but not growing. When we were back in the 90's last week, my pepper plants bloomed and set fruit. They are not as big as they were in moderate heat, but will work fine for ferments.

In a clean glass jar stuff green tomatoes, peppers, garlic (and herbs, if you choose - dill, celery...). My jalapeno  ripened to a crimson red and adds a bit of color.

I save the whey from the top of my yogurt and here it looks a bit milky (on the far left). In the center is filtered water with salt. My last ferments have been one teaspoon sea salt to about ten ounces of water. I would like to reduce the sodium, so this batch has only half the salt. To the far right is my starter. I save some brine from each batch to start the next - just like yogurt.
I fill the jars from right to left - starter, water, whey - then top off each jar with a few wine "corks". The veggies must stay under the fluid to avoid ruin. Make extra water as needed to fill completely.
I carry the jars to the sink and force the lids on. Then I shake them to get a good mixing. Finally, loosen the lids so that the gas can escape during processing. Place on a plate or tray to catch overflow. I allow three days before checking, but feel free to check at two. When fermented to your liking, seal and place in cool storage. For me that is the frig. A cellar would be so nice.

Enjoy!

When these are ready, I'll update this post with serving suggestions.

YUM!




Saturday, July 21, 2012

Incredible Chocolate Cookies


These fab cookies are made from leftover bits of other food projects.

I cook with butter if I use oil at all. This is a blend of equal amounts of butter and nut butter (in this case almond).

From the milk liqueur I have the ginger puree. It is sweet and spicy. There are no exact ingredients or measurements because when you make the cookies it will be your special offering.

I like nuts (and prefer pecans, but always have walnuts on hand), chocolate chips, coconut, and chia seeds. I add chia seeds to everything. They are my justification for indulgence.

I save the pulp from juicing and generally have carrots remains. This week I added raspberries to the juice and strained out the seeds.

I keep cake or muffin mix on hand, but oat flour with 1/2 teaspoon of baking powder per cup will work as well. (Add cocoa powder if more chocolate is desired.) Mix.


Without the eggs, the cookies were crumbly. These will be great mixed with yogurt or vanilla ice cream. They reminded me of Seattle Chocolates - my favorite candies. Instead of one flavor, it was a taste explosion in my mouth!

Yum!

More Milk Liqueur

The pictures and the process - Milk Liqueur

A couple of weeks ago I started the process again - equal parts milk, sugar, and vodka. Add a whole piece of citrus. I add ginger as well. Yesterday, (more than ten days later of shaking nightly), I started the straining process. It takes several hours and in the top frame I have my lunch of new potatoes and spinach.

Bottom right - it looks pretty clear but I strained it one more time. It is very sweet. I had a shot last night - on the rocks. I bottled and refrigerated the nectar to rest for the next four months. My last batch tasted best in that time, so I will save it until November.

Wasting nothing. I added the ginger puree to a cookie mix. Recipe in the next post.

Yum!