Vegan Quote

‘But surely the most crucial point of all is that if someone doesn’t want to eat meat, the chances are they don’t want their dinner
to look like it either. You wouldn’t dream of presenting your Jewish guests with fish carefully manufactured to look like a pork chop.
So why wave replica meat in front of someone who clearly doesn’t want to see it?’
Nigel Slater - author - Eating for England
Showing posts with label lentils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lentils. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 January 2013

Easy Yummy Indian Lentils

I received a book from a friend in Nepal who is caring for 15 orphan girls and putting them through school. She is from England and returns home every so often so on one of her trips home in 2012, she mailed me this awesome little cookbook entitled Indian Vegetarian Cuisine by Kikky Sihota. I've tried several recipes and have found them all to be yummy. I always modify them a bit based on my needs but I have not hit a dud yet! On Monday I wanted to eat some Indian food to go with the naans Corey had made so I tried two new recipes from this cookbook. The lentils were amazing and SO easy to make. I hope you enjoy them as well!

Mixed Dal

3/4 cup dried red/yellow lentils
3/4 cup dried brown/blue lentils
5 cups water
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
1 tsp minced ginger
1/4 tsp tumeric
1/4 salt
1 tsp coriander powder
1 tsp red chilli flakes

Pour small amounts of the lentils onto a plate and swirl them around to check for rocks and other debris. Put all the ingredients into a large saucepan (lentils foam up when they boil so they need a lot of space.) Bring to a boil uncovered. Turn down the heat to medium and cover but allow the steam to escape and let bubble until the lentils are done. I removed the lid and let the mixture thicken a bit as well before serving. DELICIOUS!

Monday, 19 March 2012

Awesome Kale!

Kale is an awesome leafy green that can be added to anything from soups to stews to smoothies. My step-sister chops and freezes it then adds it to her morning protein smoothies. I usually add spinach to mine but Jan swears by kale. I'll try it one day and let you know.

Here is a great article about the advantages of kale by www.organicauthority.com entitled 7 Reasons Kale is the New Beef.

While on our trip, thee was no opportunity to eat vegan unless we had an undressed salad (a rather rude salad but not as rude as these vegetables are...) so we opted for vegetarian as much as we could. If I had really thought about it this would not have come as a surprise as we were just north of Mexico and on the Pacific Ocean where seafood is king. Everything is coated in cheese and creamy sauces. Luckily we walked about 20km per day! We did get vegan food at Disneyland though! We found a cart with hummus and crackers, mango slices, pineapple, giant pickles, and dried fruit and nut mix. It was like a little piece of heaven in a sea of "toxic edibles." We ate, we enjoyed, and we are now thrilled to be back to our plant based diet.

Back to kale!

When we were in the airport in Portland, I found a wrap that proudly advertised that it was vegan so Corey and I shared one with another pot of hummus and crackers (I need to find those here - they are great even if they do produce a lot of waste. Handy to have when I suddenly need a snack on the go! let me know if you ever see these.) The wrap was delicious. More filling than wrap (my mother's complaint about wraps is that they are always more wrap than filling) and very tasty! The filling was: kale, cabbage, broccoli, pea shoots, red grapes, apple, and hazelnuts all chopped small so that you wouldn't pull big chunks out when you bit into the wrap. The filling was mixed with a soy dressing like Little Creek but it wasn't wet and drippy; only enough dressing to add a bit of moisture. Yum! I think I'll make it as a salad.

When I was growing up, we ate borecole (the dutch word for kale but for us it was the whole dish) which consisted of boiling potatoes with an onion and steaming chopped kale and a sliced rookworst on top at the same time. The juices from the sausage would drip through the kale and into the boiling water to flavour the potatoes. The potatoes and onion were mashed and the kale and rookworst mixed in to make a single dish. Apparently a dish used during hard economic times because one sausage could be used to feed a large family with cheap potatoes and kale. Obviously I don't make borecole anymore because I really don't like meat flavoured artificial sausages but the mixing of kale, onion and potato is delicious as a side dish.

And here is the real recipe for the post...

Egyptian Lentil Soup (adapted from The Accidental Vegan by Devra Gartenstein)

8 cups veggie stock
2 tsp sea salt
2 cups brown/blue/green dried lentils (not red or yellow or else it will be mush)
2 tomatoes, chopped
1 onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp dried mint (don't omit this or else it's not Egyptian)
1 bunch kale, remove the middle stem and chop the leaves
1 tbsp lemon juice

Check the lentils carefully for rocks or other debris. Trust me - I've seen beans and rice being dried on the side of the road in China - you don't want to skip this step. Combine the veggie stock, salt, lentils, tomatoes, onion, garlic, cumin, and mint in a pot. Bring it up to a boil then reduce the heat and simmer, uncovered, for 30-40 minutes. Add the chopped kale. Stir the greens in and let the soup simmer another 20 minutes. Add more stock if needed and stir often near the end of the cooking time to prevent burning. Check that your lentils are cooked. Stir in the lemon juice and serve hot.

Monday, 6 February 2012

Yoga Slow Cooker Curry

When I got home today, I needed to make something that would be ready to eat when Corey and I returned from yoga. I didn't have a lot of time before we left and I didn't want to leave anything simmering on the stove so I decided a "quick" curry in the slow cooker would be ideal. Easy to make and leave and yummy when we returned. Nice and hot to warm us up after our walk home in -7 degrees. Beautiful night with a clear sky and a fabulous full moon.

I used a Chinese eggplant and green beans but you could use any veggies like broccoli and cauliflower, carrots, frozen peas and corn, but nothing that will become too soft. Potato wouldn't cook long enough to be ready.

Brown, green or blue lentils are best because they keep their shape. Red lentils will make a mush.

Yoga Curry

1 cup brown rice (mine is mixed with a wild rice blend)
1/2 cup lentils (Check these for rocks. I have seen how they are dried in China. Don't skip this step.)
4 cups veggie stock
2 cups coconut milk (one can with water added to make 2 cups or one package powder with 2 cups boiling water)
1 tbsp curry powder
2 cups chopped raw veggies
1 chopped onion in cubes
salt
pepper
1 tbsp lemon juice

In the slow cooker, mix the rice, lentils, stock, coconut milk, curry powder, veggies and onion. Cover and let cook on high for 3 hours (or on low for 6-8 hours if you have all day). Just  before eating, stir in the lemon juice and salt and pepper to taste. Mix together and add more boiling veggie stock if necessary just before eating to make it as you prefer for texture. Depending on how long you let it cook, it might be a bit tight. You may even want to add more salt and lemon juice.

We ate this with a squeeze of HP sauce which is like a chutney but in a sauce form. It was delicious!