Category Archives: Recipes

Food Chemistry. Much trial and error goes into a new recipe and I will only post the most delicious things I create. There will also be some experimenting with recipes from cookbooks I have. Credit will always be given where it is deserved.

The Colossal Boxed Macaroni & Cheese Taste Test

The Colossal Boxed Macaroni & Cheese Taste Test

I was born and raised in the Mid-West of the United States; I think that in this country, at least when I was growing up,  kids are more or less raised on boxed mac & cheese, more specifically, Kraft mac & cheese.

It wasn’t until my husband told me he couldn’t stand boxed mac & cheeses that I ever considered that someone might not like it.   He’s from England and I guess it’s just not as popular over there.  He said it didn’t taste like cheese and it didn’t taste like much of anything else either.  I contemplated that for a long time, I still do in fact.  Kraft doesn’t taste like a piece of cheese or even like homemade macaroni & cheese, but it was one of my favorite comfort foods.  NOTHING brought me back to childhood like a bowl of Kraft macaroni & cheese, and if I see sliced up hotdogs in it I might just as well be sitting at the big wooden dinner table with lion’s heads for feet in our old yellow kitchen, I can almost hear my Mom humming as she makes me lunch.

I’m not so keen on the crazy processed cheese powder or the idea of a hotdog (not an actual meat one anyway), but we have fake versions of these now and I’m on a mission to find the best vegan box of macaroni & cheese that’s out there!  What I’ve tried I’d found locally in Denver, I haven’t special ordered anything online!  I found the Road’s End Organics brand at Whole Foods and I found the Leahey brand at Nooch Market.  I just can’t bring myself to order food online very often – there’s nothing wrong with it, especially if you don’t live in a big city with vegan options surrounding you, but I feel like grocery shopping should take place locally and in-person if at all possible.  Though I’m sure one day I’ll make the switch and wonder why I wasted all that time driving to the store, after all, I order diapers online and love that they’re delivered in 2 days to my front door!

The following macaroni & cheese trials took place in the very controlled environment of my personal kitchen.  The tast testers were myself, my 3-year-old son, and sometimes special lunch guests.

 

 

Road’s End Macaroni & Chreese – Whole Wheat Pasta, Soy Free, Lactose Free, Cholesterol Free

Looks almost like the box’s photo!

Road’s End Organics Dairy Free Mac & Chreese – Cheddar Style Organic Pasta Dinner.  Soy Free, Lactose Free, Cholesterol Free, Whole Wheat Pasta.

This is the first vegan macaroni & cheese I’d ever tried.  I remember the early days of this, it wasn’t great.  I was searching for comfort food and it delivered in that it was pasta in the shape of macaroni and it was warm and squishy with a bit of sauce on it.  However, the sauce isn’t very creamy.  I’ve been eating this particular brand and style for about a year, so I’ve gotten used to it.  I buy it, though I wouldn’t say I ever crave it.  The pasta is good, but the sauce leaves my mouth feeling a little grainy or powdery – I believe part of it is that it’s whole wheat pasta, not the squishy white stuff of my childhood; it’s definitely missing something creamy.

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Road’s End Shells & Chreese Cheddar Style – Soy Free, Lactose Free, Cholesterol Free

Shells & Chreese

Road’s End Organics Dairy Free Shells & Chreese Cheddar Style

This style of macaroni & cheese isn’t the one I’ve been looking for either.  It doesn’t taste like cheese – it actually doesn’t taste like much.  I wondered if it was one of those things that people say tastes “like cardboard” but it wasn’t cardboard either.  However, it is warm and squishy pasta – it gets some points for that.  It’s also not very creamy.

When I come across a macaroni and cheese that doesn’t taste good or taste of much I do this thing I learned from my Dad – I put ketchup on it.  I’ve not come across another person who does this, it’s weird, right?  I also go with hot sauce too, hot sauce can fix almost anything.

My toddler ate it, but didn’t ask for seconds and he refused to eat leftovers the next day.

I DO NOT recommend buying or consuming this macaroni and cheese unless you’re absolutely required to.

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Road’s End Mac & Chreese Alfredo Style – Gluten Free, Soy Free, Lactose Free, Cholesterol Free

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 Road’s End Organics Mac & Chreese Alfredo Style 

This is “Alfredo Style” so in my mind it doesn’t fall under my true search for vegan macaroni & cheese, but I thought I’d give it a whirl!

I’m pretty much not a fan of anything gluten-free, not that I’m afraid or closed minded, but there’s often a texture that comes with gluten-free, something powdery or grainy on my tongue.  It’s distracting.  I have had some great gluten-free food, but instant, processed gluten-free stuff is usually a little icky for me.  I deeply apologize for any gluten-free people here: I’m sorry for making that sweeping generalization AND I’m sorry that your options are reduced (especially if you’re also vegan!)

This box of macaroni and cheese wasn’t the macaroni & cheese I was seeking, but it is creamy.  I think what my mouth is craving is a box of cheddar flavored pasta, not alfredo.  While making this box I found the pasta to be very starchy and it’s definitely necessary to rinse it after it’s done cooking!

The first bite had a peppery flavor even though pepper isn’t in the list of ingredients.  There is also a lentil, raw beany flavor there.  I really hate that raw bean flavor!  NOT my new favorite, but after pouring my favorite sesame sauce over it…it’s awesome!  Alone, I wouldn’t buy it again!!

Also, if you look at the photo on the box it looks like there’s some crispy bread crumbs to sprinkle on top – that is not true.  The rest of their boxes are not deceptive, but this one is!  The finished product does not look like the box photo; they must have added bread crumbs to make it look better.  Fool me once…

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Road's End Penne & Chreese, Gluten Free - Cheddar Style

Road’s End Penne & Chreese, Cheddar Style – Gluten Free, Soy Free, Lactose Free, Cholesterol Free

I added in the vegan hotdogs myself (not included with the pasta!)

I added in the vegan hotdogs myself (not included with the pasta!)

Road’s End Organics – Dairy Free, Gluten Free Penne & Chreese

This box mixed up really nicely and looks good and creamy…but the gluten free, brown rice pasta tasted really beany and had a slightly grainy feel in my mouth.  It also needed salt (if you ask me).

I added in some vegan hotdogs just like my mom used to make for me.  Hotdogs and macaroni & cheese go hand in hand!  The hotdogs in the bowl were a nice treat, but the sauce was still yucky – I added ketchup, my regular bad-flavor-fixer.  My 3-year-old still said, “It’s a lot, a lot, a lot a-yucky.”

Totally agreed!!

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IMG_5191

123'z "4 Kidz"

123′z “4 Kidz”

Road’s End 123′z & Chreeze

This is almost certainly the same exact thing as the Road’s End Cheddar Mac & Chreeze, but with letters and numbers.

When mixing together the sauce mix, almond milk, Earth Balance, and powder it was really sticky – no matter how much extra milk I poured in.  The numbers just squished together into clumps – defeating the purpose of having numbers and letters – if it’s impossible to differentiate them from one another.

There’s nothing creamy about this meal!  It is nearly flavorless, rather, it’s a bland flavor that I can’t put into words.  Maybe a tomato powder flavor combined with a salty sensation on my tongue.

It’s warm and squishy, that’s all it has going for it.  Definitely a candidate for my odd ketchup remedy or hot sauce!  My 3-year-old ate the whole bowl full, but he’s not always a consistent judge of a good meal and he didn’t want seconds or left-overs.

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Leahey Macaroni & Cheese Gluten Free

Leahey GF Mac & Cheese

Leahey Gardens Macaroni & Cheese – Gluten Free

Again with the gluten-free…sigh, sad face.  It’s just who I am, I’m unaccepting of some inferior GF products.  However, THIS IS CREAMY!  If you’re all up into that gluten-free business this just may be the macaroni & cheese for you!!  It’s certainly the best gluten free macaroni & cheese that I’ve had (that comes in a box and is prepared almost instantly).

Personally, I just can’t get past that beany, grainy, gluten-free thing.  I get distracted!

If you’re not gluten-free definitely READ ON!

{(Spoiler Alert!)}  Good news coming below  :)

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IMG_5296

 

Looks Good!

Leahey Macaroni & Cheese

Leahey Gardens Macaroni & Cheese

This macaroni & cheese is  difficult to find.  I happen to know it’s available at Nooch Market in Denver, you can also order it online directly from Leahey, Pangea, or Vegan Essentials.  Besides Nooch Market I’ve never seen it in another store – you should request it though, and when it sells out you’ll probably have the pleasure of picking some up whenever you’re at the grocery store!

First of all, I love the packaging, it’s a thick paper bag with a fold-over top.  The coolest thing about that, besides not using paperboard, is that you can tear off the top of the bag and you’ve got yourself a free prize: 1 Twist Tie for future use!   I’m not a big fan of twist ties, but every now and then it’s nice to have one and this one is nice and hefty.

Free twist tie included!

Free twist tie included!

I cooked it up and served it in bowls for my son and I.  It looks awesome, it’s not a squished mess like some of the others I’ve tried so far.  The pasta is not mushy, it’s held its shape which is a great visual property.

My first bite: The pasta is smooth and soft with just enough firmness – not chewy, but it didn’t disintegrate as soon as it hit my tongue either.  The first flavor, I call the pre-flavor (as opposed to the after-taste) is amazing!  It has a true cheesy flavor, a slight Nutritional Yeast Flavor (I don’t mind that at all), and perfect salt levels.  The post-flavor/after-taste  experience is a little bit distracting, I was left with an oh-so-slight powdery/grainy texture between my tongue and the roof of my mouth.  Perhaps next time I will cook the sauce a little longer to make sure the cheese powder dissolves completely.

I had NO craving to put ketchup, hot sauce, or anything else on top of this Mac & Cheese to improve it!  I think this is the best vegan Mac & Cheese out there!  It’s not the Kraft of my childhood, but that crap is riddled with artificial colors and flavors…and cow’s milk.  I’d like to revise my previous statement: Leahey’s Macaroni & Cheese is THE BEST!  Get ready for memories from your deep childhood to come rushing back to you  :)

As I was writing this colossal blog post (really, it took me a long time and I don’t think I’ll be craving macaroni & cheese for a while!) I kept reading a blog called Food Babe and she was blasting Kraft for all the garbage they put in their macaroni & cheese.  Carcinogens totally negate any warm, fuzzy rush of childhood memories.  Besides it’s probably not as good as I remember…perhaps unless my Mom made it back in the old yellow kitchen of ours.

Are you a macaroni & cheese connoisseur?  What’s your favorite?  Are there any flavors/brands I’ve missed??

 

P.S. For the most part I’ve done my food styling with children’s dishes.  I AM NOT saying macaroni & cheese is only for children nor is it a child’s food.  It’s quick and fast for lunches, but I like it too!  I’m just have cuter kid’s dishes  :)

How to De-Pit Dates and Stuff Them with Goodness

How to De-Pit Dates and Stuff Them with Goodness

I like surprises: birthday gifts, parties, weather, babies, and puppies – pretty much any surprise where fun is involved!  With food I find it funny when things are stuffed in things.  Pickles and pimentos, stuffed peppers, stuffed tomatoes, stuffed shells, even burritos and spring rolls!  When I found organic dates in the bulk section the other day I brought some home and wondered what to do with them.  After taking out the pit and seeing that perfect hole in the middle I knew I had to stuff them!  But with what?

Here’s where I started, inventing a new way (for me anyway) to remove the pit.

 

Cut!

Cut!

I cut across one end to remove the top.  I could see the top of the pit, but couldn’t grab it with anything and using my teeth would just be a little gross if I were to share these with anyone  :)

Find the pit!

Find the pit!

I retrieved my tweezers from my bathroom (is that worse than using my teeth) and promptly sanitized them.  I stuck the tip of the tweezers into the tip of the date and pulled the pit right out!  Easy, peasy!  I now have a need for a dedicated pair of tweezers in my kitchen!!  Turns out kitchen tweezers have already been invented, but had I seen them over at Bed, Bath, and Whatever before this occasion I would have laughed at the idea!

Slide out the pit!

Slide out the pit!

Stuff

Stuff

I started with vegan chocolate chips and moved on from there.  This was the prefect project for my son to help with – he can eat the chocolate chips that fall on the floor and he’s good at stuffing things in things.

Use a chopstick to push chocolate to the bottom

Use a chopstick to push chocolate to the bottom

Stuff more

Stuff more

Squeeze to seal

Squeeze to seal

Of course you can stuff whatever you want in the dates.  My next idea was raspberry jam.  Then I did raspberry jam AND chocolate chips.

Jam Syringe

Jam Syringe

I had an old baby feeding syringe  in the drawer and spooned some jam into it.  This might be a great halloween “bloody syringe” too!  You can pick up a free baby feeding syringe at most pharmacies.

Heat through

Heat through

Place the stuffed dates in a dry pan and heat over medium heat.  I flipped them after about 3 minutes – the dates started making a quiet sizzling sound.  If the pan gets too hot you can add a tiny bit of water.  Then I kept the dates in the pan for another 1-2 minutes.

Making sure the chocolate melted

Making sure the chocolate melted

Sweet Treat

Dessert is ready!  Be careful to not eat them immediately and scald yourself with molten chocolate – let cool for a few minutes  :)

Speaking of stuffed food, I have a strange respect for the “Turducken,” not for the dead meat, but for the hilarious (except for the dead animals) concept of stuffing a duck inside a chicken inside a turkey.  In the UK they have something called the “Royal Roast,” which is a pigeon stuffed with sausage, stuffed into a pheasant, into a chicken, into a turkey, and all put into a goose!  Whew.  No, I wouldn’t touch it with a 10 foot pole, but it’s creative and unexpected.

What if I stuffed a pimento into an olive and stuffed it into a date?  My next thoughts are to create a hilarious vegan style Turducken.  Any ideas??

Other ideas I’ve been pondering for these dates:  vegan cream cheese would be good, other vegan cheeses, fake bacon, or almonds.  What would you stuff dates with?

 

The Quesadilla Sandwich aka “The Mexican Sandwich”

The Quesadilla Sandwich aka “The Mexican Sandwich”
The Quesadilla Sandwich aka “The Mexican Sandwich”

Lunch often seems to get overlooked in the “meal planning” schedule, especially at my house.  I usually go with noodles and sauce or a sandwich – I love sandwiches, so much so that lunch just may be my favorite meal (one of my favorite meals anyway!).  Going out to dinner is standard old-hat, but going out for lunch really gets me excited – something in the middle of the day (making a nooner cocktail legal), there are lots of meal options, and you still have a good part of the day ahead of you when you walk out the door…there’s still hope for accomplishing something with the remainder of the day.  Hope, that’s what lunch offers me.

When I have a few extra minutes for cooking I like to have something warm for luncheon: a toasted sandwich or a quesadilla come to mind.  The Vegan Quesadilla is one of my favorites, but I took it a step further and I bring you: The Mexican Sandwich.

It’s a quesadilla.  It’s a sandwich.  It’s both at the same time!  Have I blown your mind?

Making the quesadilla

Making the quesadilla

The Quesadilla Sandwich aka "The Mexican Sandwich"

Ingredients

  • ---For the Quesadilla---
  • 2 large tortillas
  • 1-2 handfulls of Daiya - cheddar flavor or other
  • ---For the Sandwich---
  • 3-4 slices Tofurky "lunchmeat"
  • Salad Greens
  • (optionals)
  • Salsa
  • Tomato
  • Vegan Sour Cream
  • Veganaise
  • Mustard
  • Sliced Onion

Instructions

  1. Start out by making a vegan quesadilla
  2. Let the quesadilla cool for a few minutes
  3. Cut the quesadilla in half
  4. Pretend the quesadilla halves are bread
  5. Build a sandwich to your liking!
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Sandwich Assembly

Sandwich Assembly

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I prefer savory sandwiches (vs. PB&J or other sweeter ones) and love adding vegan lunchmeat and pesto or my Delicious Sesame Sauce.  Other favorite sandwich ingredients include: tomatoes, cucumbers, salt & pepper, arugala, marmite, sauerkraut, hummus, or my BEST Bean Dip.

Chow-Down Sandwich Time!

Chow-Down Sandwich Time!

What makes a kick-ass sandwich for you??  I’m sure I’ve just left out a lot of awesome ingredients!

 

 

 

 

Food Myth Debunked: Peppers, Bumps, and Their Seeds

Food Myth Debunked: Peppers, Bumps, and Their Seeds
Food Myth Debunked: Peppers, Bumps, and Their Seeds

I recently read an article about peppers, the advice was to choose a red (or green or yellow) pepper based on the number of bumps on the bottom of the pepper.  It said that peppers with 3 bumps on the bottom (the male pepper) have fewer seeds than peppers with 4 bumps (the female pepper), making it easier to clean when chopping – and you’d be paying less by pound if you’re not paying for all those seeds inside!

I thought this sounded great!  I never knew the difference between the 3 and 4-bump peppers before, I guess that was it! Yay!!

The next time I was at the grocery I was picking up a pepper and decided to search for one 3 and one 4-bump pepper to see for myself.  I found 2 red peppers that fit the bill, went home, and cut them in half…

Male & Female Peppers

The 3-bump pepper is on the left and the 4-bump pepper is on the right.  The one on the right is slightly larger and had slightly more seeds, but that’s just due to it’s larger size.  This myth is DEBUNKED!

Upon further research I found that there is no male or female pepper, the different number of bumps on the bottom is due to the variety, not the sex.  Fruits have no gender AND peppers are a fruit!  Fruit comes from a flower and flowers have both sexual parts, something-something-something, it’s here that I get somewhat confused so I’ll just go back to my previous statement that: fruits have no gender.

Go ahead and buy a 3-bump or a 4-bump pepper, I think the amount of seeds is truly hit-or-miss, but generally the larger the pepper the more seeds you will encounter.

Also, I read that one is sweeter than another, but again that has to do with variety – some varieties are sweeter than others, but you’ve got to know your varieties to be able to confidently choose a sweeter pepper.

 

Lemon-Arugala Spaghetti

Lemon-Arugala Spaghetti
Lemon-Arugala Spaghetti

We recently moved to California and while I knew one could grow citrus in one’s own yard here, I hadn’t really experienced it until we moved in.  I unfortunately don’t have a citrus tree in our yard -but our neighbors do  I wonder if while I long for a lemon tree, do people who have lemon trees secretly hate them for the nasty rotton fruit that eventually ends up on the ground?  We just moved from a home with 12 old-growth crabapple trees surrounding the house – I couldn’t hate a tree more than those crabapples, they showered the house with apples from July through November – it sounded like hail.  And don’t get me started on the cleanup in the yard, I swear I was out there with a snow shovel (no exaggeration!) cleaning them up into a large trash bin nearly every day.  I’m no wimp when it comes to yard work, but this was totally excessive – billions of crabapples every season.

Anyway, are citrus trees a nuisance or do people love them?  I probably use one lemon per day, sometimes two.  Whenever I go to the grocery I automatically pick up two or three, just in case.

5 Classic Ingredients

This recipe was invented last week when I realized I was out of groceries and didn’t know what to make.  As I pawed through the pantry and the fridge I pulled out these five items and got to work.  I almost always have these items on hand, they’ve just never debuted together on my stovetop.  Pine nuts, lemon, spaghetti noodles, Earth Balance, and arugala (or spinach or any green probably) – these are all great staples to have on hand!

Toasty Pine Nuts

Lemon-Arugala Spaghetti

Ingredients

  • 1 8oz box Spaghetti
  • 3 Tbsp Pine Nuts
  • 1 medium-large Lemon
  • 3-4 Tbsp Earth Balance - or your fav vegan butter
  • 1-2 handfuls Arugala

Instructions

  1. Toast the pine nuts first in a dry pan over medium to medium-high heat until they start to brown and smell toasty. Set aside.
  2. Zest the lemon. Set aside and keep the lemon for its juice in a moment.
  3. Boil the noodles according to package instructions.
  4. Drain the noodles and set aside.
  5. Over a medium flame put the Earth Balance, lemon zest, and squeeze all of the lemon juice into pan - discard lemon rind. Stir until mixed together and melted.
  6. Add the noodles to the pan and stir until the butter sauce is evenly distributed.
  7. Add the arugala (more or less depending on your preference). Stir until mixed and remove from heat when the arugala becomes wilted.
  8. Serve with the nuts sprinkled over individual servings, if they're stirred into the pan they always sink to the bottom.
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The flavor of this dish is so fresh and delicious.  Lemon always makes things feel wholesome, clean, and alive!  It pops in my mouth and makes me smile, my blood pressure drops, and I feel like it’s summer.  Is that crazy?  Do you feel that way about lemon?  Do you have a food that does that to you?

Get ready for a blast of lemon!

This dish goes very nicely with a piece of crusty garlic toast too!

Even my toddler loved these noodles and he’s going through a phase of not wanting to eat anything that doesn’t fall under the category of dessert.

Rare photo of my toddler scarfing down food!

Authentic Garlic Toast

Authentic Garlic Toast
Authentic Garlic Toast

What do you eat garlic toast with?  I’m not sure there’s nothing garlic toast couldn’t go with.  Italian.  Soup.  Chili.  Stew.  Curry.  Noodles.  Cereal?  Probably not, but if it’s after 11am I can’t make any promises.

When I was a kid my Mom used to make garlic toast sometimes;  she would toast it in the oven, under the broiler, and then put butter and garlic salt on the toast.  I do like to toast it in the oven, it’s easier if you’re making more than a couple of pieces and it just seems more romantic that way – something old fashioned about it.  But garlic salt?  No thank you.

The most important part of my garlic toast is: GARLIC!  I use whole garlic on my toast.  Garlic salt and garlic powder do not compare to using real garlic!  And why wouldn’t you want to use real garlic?  I mean, really?

Instead of butter I use Earth Balance.  With Earth Balance there is NO reason to ever miss butter.  It’s awesome!  Yes, I know they have the whole palm oil thing going on, but they are taking measures to ensure they’re not contributing to the killing of orangutans and other endangered animals.  Check out my palm oil blog post here.

Authentic Garlic Toast

Ingredients

  • Bread - as many pieces as you would like
  • 1 clove Garlic - or more if you're making a lot of toast
  • Earth Balance or other vegan butter substitute

Instructions

  1. Toast your bread in the toaster or under the broiler in the oven
  2. Peel the garlic and cut one end off so there is a small flat surface on one end.
  3. Hold the clove of garlic with the flat cut end against your toast and rub the garlic all over your toast.
  4. Rub as much garlic on your toast as you like - use a little (mild flavor) or a lot (more intense garlic flavor)
  5. Spread on some vegan butter with a knife - again, use as little or as much as you like.
  6. Enjoy your authentic garlic toast!
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Authentic Garlic Toast

This recipe (I’m not sure 3 ingredients constitutes a recipe!) may seem obvious, but having been raised on garlic salt and garlic powder I always enjoy eating eating garlic toast this way.

Feel free to enjoy the garlic toast like this or you can top it with vegan cheese, marmite, brushetta, or other yummy toppings.  I also like to make this garlic toast and then create a grilled cheese sandwich with it.

What do you like on your toast? What do you eat garlic toast with??

 

No-More-Crying Onion Cutting Experiments

No-More-Crying Onion Cutting Experiments

Cutting onions and crying just go together; one expects the old familiar burning and tearing up when the onion gets chopped in half.  It’s life – it’s the onion’s defense system against getting eaten!  It’s what we endure to enjoy an onion.

There are a lot of myths surrounding the desire to avoid crying over a cutting board of chopped onions and I’m trying some of them out to see what works for me!  Short of wearing goggles (see image at the bottom) while I chop my onions, I’m going to try as many methods as I can – if you know of something I haven’t tried, please add it to the comments below!

Controls: I always use a wood or bamboo cutting board and I use the same super-sharp ceramic knife.  I am also always chopping the onion into a medium sized chop (unless otherwise stated).  I always cut off the top, then the root, then cut the onion in half to peel (except with the Onion Under Water experiment).

 

An Onion on Ice

Method: Place the onion in the freezer for 10 minutes prior to cutting.  I tried this with the highest of hopes!  It sounded a little strange, but the idea of cooling the onion in the freezer sounded so odd that I’d hoped it was the method that would work best.  I mean, who would think of this to begin with?  And why would it be a known method if it didn’t work?

I chilled the onion in my freezer for 10 minutes.  I then sliced into the onion, cut it in half and I could already feel the familiar burn in my sinuses.  I peeled the two halves of the onion and began chopping one of the halves, at this point I was already crying.  FAIL!

 

 

A Toothpick to Chew On

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Rum Balls

Rum Balls
Rum Balls

[Disclaimer: We moved across the country immediately before Christmas, so our holiday decorating and treat making were a little delayed and hurried.  This blog post is about a month overdue - I know everyone is way past thinking about the holidays!  But I really did just make the rum balls this weekend.  I'm late!]

I don’t know that this is universal, but when I think of Rum Balls I think of Christmas.  Rum balls have always been a holiday delicacy in my home.  Some of my earliest memories are of eating rum balls with my Dad and sitting in the living room looking at the lights on our Christmas tree.  I believe the recipe came from my Dad’s mother.

One year when I was in elementary school, somewhere between 1st and 3rd grades, I was asked to bring a treat to share with my classmates for the class party before our winter vacation.  While discussing it with my mother I asked if we could make rum balls together.  Some smiles and laughter erupted and it was explained to me that it would be frowned upon to bring treats that contained alcohol.  I was a bit saddened because I wanted to share my favorite holiday treat with all my friends – I knew they would love rum balls too!  I don’t remember what I did bring to class, but it was probably something not nearly as memorable or delightful.  Finally, finally, finally I get to share my favorite treat with my friends here!  I should hit Facebook to connect with all my old classmates to share with them too!

It was my Mom who made the rum balls each year, she also made my grandmother’s recipe for fruit cake.  I’m not a big fan of fruitcake, but she did make the best fruitcake I’ve ever tried.  When my parents got divorced I somehow acquired the rum ball recipe and I kept making the rum balls every year for my Dad.  I just mailed out his box yesterday, he’ll be very surprised to receive them this week!  I can’t wait to get the phone call from him.  They’ve always been his favorite treat too and I thought it would be comforting to him if I continued our holiday tradition of scarfing down rum balls by the tree.  Freud may say I’m just trying to take my mother’s place and wanting to marry my father, but that’s a topic for my shrink…

Decorating our tree on a rainy day.

Now that my son is 3 I believe it’s time for him to start acquiring a taste for rum balls.  He’s already in love with chocolate and didn’t hesitate to try a rum ball this year.  He made short work of it by biting it in half and finishing it all in two bites.  I wasn’t raised with a lot of family traditions, but I like to think that rum balls at the holidays is one of them and I hope when my son is older we can recount our time around the Christmas tree eating rum balls and admiring the pretty lights and baubles.

Christmas morning

I’ve altered the recipe somewhat to keep out the eggy Nilla Wafers, light corn syrup, and I use vegan sugar and chocolate, but I’ve otherwise stayed true to my grandmother’s recipe. Read the rest of this entry

Kale Pesto Besto

Kale Pesto Besto
Kale Pesto Besto

I am in love with pasta, I could easily be one of those vegans who eats noodles every day, in fact sometimes I am.  I recently was thinking up my list of recipes for the week and realized I hadn’t had noodles on the menu for at least a couple of weeks (how could this be?)!  I’ve been on a soup kick and somehow didn’t notice the lack of soft, comforting noodles.  Weird.

I decided we’re going to have a pesto, but I often get bogged down by the amount of basil one must buy in order to make enough to serve a family.  I usually grow my own, but we just moved out of state a few weeks ago and I haven’t gotten to the point of growing anything yet.  Even when I do have my own basil plant I typically have to steal all of its leaves to make a meal! What I do have a lot of these days is KALE.  I hate to jump on any “superfood” bandwagon since there’s a new superfood discovered nearly every day, but we’ve come to love our kale.  On Sundays we walk up to a farmers’ market just a few blocks from our house (Kensington Farmers’ Market) and buy 4-5 bunches of kale from a local organic farm.  I typically juice most of it, but I think I got a little too much last week – this ends in other kale inventions such as this.

Yummy Delicious Pesto

I’m not saying I invented kale pesto, I’m almost certain I haven’t, but I did just whip it together for dinner last night and it was a bit of an experiment for me.  I wasn’t sure the kale would be sweet enough as it can sometimes be quite bitter and/or tough to eat, so I blanched it with the garlic for 3 minutes to soften and sweeten it up.  I ended up making a lot, which is great because it’s delicious maximous!  We’re having it two nights in a row and I’ll freeze the rest in an ice cube tray for some quick lunches for the toddler and I.

Toasty warm pine nuts

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Water Sauteing

Water Sauteing
Water Sauteing

It may seem self-explanatory or obvious, but I hadn’t heard about water sauteing until a year or so ago.  I’ve also had some other people asking me about it lately, so I thought I’d throw this idea out there.

It is a simple and much healthier option than cooking your vegetables in oil on the stove!  I’m thrilled to be cutting out 1-2 tablespoons of oil per meal, those calories really add up.  Each tablespoon of olive oil is 120 calories and 14 grams of fat – 2 being saturated fat.  Fat that will never get to see my thighs or stomach!

I use this method to saute onions mostly, because that’s what I saute most often, but it can be used for most any vegetable that you’re cooking and trying to soften.  However, I don’t think this method will get you a nice crispy crunch or sear.

A little boiling water

I can’t give an exact measurement because pan sizes vary, but I use just enough water to cover the bottom of the pan.  I heat the pan over the heat I plan to cook over (medium-high) and let the water start to bubble and boil.

Sauteing Onions

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