Showing posts with label In Praise of Veg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In Praise of Veg. Show all posts

Monday, May 01, 2023

Ginger sparkle biscuits

 April 7, 2023

   

I am just about through my to-cook list from In Praise of Veg! These ginger biscuits looked best suited to autumn/winter conditions so I saved them up for the Easter weekend. We already have a few ginger biscuit recipes on the blog, and the special features that drew me to these ones were the Chinese five-spice in the dough and the pretty slices of crystallised ginger on top.

I get less excited about the prospect of rolling out dough, but this one was easy to manoeuvre between two sheets of plastic wrap. I cut the biscuits into simple circles, and slightly regret that I didn't go for moose, although moose might have lacked the soft centre of these just-slightly-underbaked rounds. I couldn't really detect the full spectrum of the five spices in these biscuits, but they were warming sweet comfort regardless - I'd gladly bake them again.

 

Ginger sparkle biscuits
(a recipe from Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg)

1/3 cup molasses
120g butter
1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1 egg, beaten
1 1/2 cups plain flour, plus extra for dusting
1 1/2 tablespoons ground ginger
1 1/2 teaspoons Chinese five-spice
150g brown sugar
1/4 cup coffee sugar crystals (or raw sugar)
1/4 crystallised ginger, finely sliced

Melt together the molasses and butter in a large saucepan over high heat. When they're well mixed and smooth, turn off the heat and stir in the bicarbonate of soda. The mixture will froth up to double its original volume. Set the mixture aside to cool. When the molasses mixture is ready, whisk in the egg. 

In a large bowl, stir together the flour, ground ginger, five-spice and brown sugar. Pour the molasses mixture into these dry ingredients, and stir everything together to form a dough. Divide the mixture in half. Place each half onto a sheet of plastic wrap, form it into a disc, and wrap it up. Refrigerate the dough discs for at least an hour, and even overnight if it suits.

Preheat an oven to 180°C. Line a baking tray or two with paper. 

Retrieve one of the dough discs from the fridge and roll it out to 5mm thick. You can dust a clean surface and rolling pin. Instead I rolled my dough between the two plastic wraps sheets that I'd already used. Use your favourite biscuit cutter to make shapes from the dough and place them on the baking tray(s). Repeat with the remaining dough, rolling up the scraps to make more biscuits. Scatter the biscuits with sugar crystals and crystallised ginger slices, then bake them for 7-8 minutes, until a light golden brown. 

Saturday, April 15, 2023

Marinated Brussels sprouts

March 26, 2023

   

I have already found a new home for my copy of In Praise of Veg, but I tucked away a few more recipes to try before passing it on. I've been poised especially to use the 'seventies dinner party sprouts' one as soon as I noticed good Brussels sprouts at the shops. They're briefly marinated in a sweet soy mixture and cooked on high heat to achieve crisp, slightly burned edges.

My sprouts didn't have the high colour contrast of Zaslavsky's - perhaps I should have spread them across two trays to give them a bit of room and extra browning. The flavour was also more subtle than I expected but still very satisfying, especially with the peanuts in the mix. The room temperature leftovers were at least as good as the first go-round, and we ate them alongside leftover corn & tomato salad.


Marinated Brussels sprouts
(slightly adapted from a recipe in Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg)

500g Brussels sprouts, trimmed and halved
roasted peanuts, to garnish (optional)
chopped red chilli, to garnish (optional)

marinade
2 tablespoons honey, maple syrup or golden syrup
2 tablespoons tamari
2 tablespoons peanut oil
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon caraway seeds
1/4 teaspoon cayenne
2-3 cloves garlic, crushed


Preheat an oven to 220°C. Place a baking tray in the oven to heat up.

Whisk the marinade ingredients together in a shallow container. Arrange the sprouts in the marinade and get them thoroughly coated in the liquid.

When the oven and the tray are hot, carefully retrieve the tray and line it with paper. Spread the sprouts out across the tray and hold onto the remaining marinade. Bake the sprouts for around 10 minutes, until they're slightly burned at the edges.

Serve the sprouts dressed in the leftover marinade, garnished with peanuts and chilli (if using).

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Chang-ed up wombok slaw with plum sauce

November 28, 2022
   
   

Cindy picked this crunchy noodle salad out of Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg partly because of a nostalgic enthusiasm for the classic side-of-the-packet Chang's noodle salad and partly because we had a bottle of plum sauce in the fridge that wasn't otherwise getting used. This is really only a slightly tweaked version of the original - the dressing leans on plum sauce rather than sugar and vinegar and you get a few fancier ingredients in the salad itself (radishes, honey cashews). Why mess with the best though, right? This has the same joyful combination of sweetness and crunch, and takes almost no time to throw together. The noodles loose their punch pretty quickly, so keep some spare to jazz up the leftovers.


Chang-ed up wombok slaw with plum sauce
(based on a recipe from Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg)

3 spring onions, sliced on an angle
6 small radishes, thinly sliced and halved
1/2 a big wombok (about 600g), shredded
100g crispy fried noodles
50g honey roasted cashews

dressing
1/3 cup plum sauce
1/4 cup rice wine vinegar
1 tablespoon tamari
2 teaspoons sesame oil

Soak the spring onions and radishes in cold water for 5 minutes and then drain and toss in a large bowl with the wombok.

Whisk together the dressing ingredients.

Scatter half the noodles and half the cashews over the salad and drizzle with half the dressing. 

Serve, topped with the remaining cashews and noodles and with the leftover dressing added to the plated salad.

Saturday, December 10, 2022

Jalapeño poppers

 November 27, 2022

   

Cindy's been working her way through recipes she bookmarked from In Praise of Veg and, when a surprise delivery of fancy vegan cream cheese arrived at our house, she knew it was time to bust out these poppers. The original recipe takes regular dairy cream cheese and fancies it up with smoked paprika, garlic powder and coriander, but we just used the pickled red onion and dill Damona cream cheese. We lazily used real cheddar on top for guaranteed meltiness.

With the cream cheese substitution it's a very simple recipe, that really comes down to your dexterity in stuffing the little jalapeños -  I managed the stuffing reasonably well, but then half of them tipped over in the oven and needed a bit of emergency re-stuffing. The final result was great: our jalapeños still packed a bit of a punch, and the Damona and cheddar only partly smoothed it over, so it's a spicy treat, but definitely a treat.


Jalapeño poppers
(based on a recipe from Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg)

12 jalapeño chillies
200g flavoured vegan cream cheese
1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika (for sprinkling)
100g cheddar, grated


Preheat the oven to 200°C and line a baking tray with paper.

With a small knife cut a long panel out of one side of your chillies - a little pointy oval maybe 1-2cm wide at its widest point. Scrape out the seeds and innards - rinse them to make sure you get as many seeds out as possible.

Press the cream cheese into the peppers, trying to smush it right into the hollow, but leaving a little indent on top and then stuffing the cheddar into it.

Stand the poppers up on your baking tray - try to arrange them so they're supported by each other or the tray edge so they don't tip over and leak out all the melty cheese. Bake for about 15 minutes, until the cheese goes golden on top. 

Sprinkle with smoked paprika and serve.

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Roasted butternut pumpkin with sage & macadamias

November 24, 2022

   

So here's the 'heftier side' we ate with our rhubarb-smothered haloumi: roasted butternut pumpkin topped with macadamia nuts, green olives and sage, all toasted in butter. (As with the fennel cacciatore, I chose green over kalamata olives as a personal preference.) Sage, butter and pumpkin are a pretty common combination, and I loved the extra toasty crunch of macadamias and piquance of olives in this version. The pumpkin's baking time was all I needed to get the haloumi recipe together, and we got two colourful and satisfying meals out of these two dishes for two people.

The red of the rhubarb and tomatoes, plus the green and gold here have me thinking that these two dishes could work well for a vegetarian Christmas meal. We'll definitely come back to both of them, regardless of what's on the menu on the 25th.



Roasted butternut pumpkin with sage & macadamias
(slightly adapted from Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg)

1 butternut pumpkin
1 teaspoon brown sugar
1 teaspoon salt
~1/3 cup olive oil
100g macadamia nuts, roughly chopped
80g butter
50g green olives, halved and pits removed
1 handful fresh sage leaves


Preheat an oven to 190°C. Line a large baking tray with paper.

Carefully slice the pumpkin in half lengthways. Scoop out the seeds. In the remaining hollow, mix together the sugar, salt and 2 tablespoons of the olive oil. Rub this mixture into the cut side of the pumpkin. Place the pumpkin pieces onto the baking tray, cut side down. Roast for 40-50 minutes, until tender.

When the pumpkin has about 15 minutes to go, place the macadamias, olives, butter, 1 teaspoon olive oil and sage leaves into a small saucepan. Heat, stirring regularly, until the butter is melted, the macadamias are golden and the sage is a bit crispy. 

To serve, spoon the macadamia-butter mixture over the cut-side-up pumpkin halves.

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Haloumi with roasted rhubarb & tomatoes

November 24, 2022

   

Haloumi is so tasty straight up that I'm rarely inclined to do anything extra or new with it. We typically just tuck it into Turkish bread sandwiches with roasted veges, and sometimes put it in a salad. This In Praise of Veg recipe is another fantastic option that's just barely any extra effort: fried haloumi pieces topped with a sweet and sour medley of roasted rhubarb, sliced shallots and cherry tomatoes in red wine vinegar. It would make an excellent light meal with just a green salad on the side, but we ate it with a heftier side dish that will appear in my next post.


Haloumi with roasted rhubarb & tomatoes
(a recipe from Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg)

4 rhubarb stalks (about 250g)
2 French shallots, thinly sliced
1/4 cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
100g cherry tomatoes, halved
200g haloumi, sliced into 1cm thick pieces
2 tablespoons olive oil

Preheat an oven to 190°C. Line a baking tray with paper.

Wash and trim the rhubarb stalks. Cut them into 4cm lengths, and cut any thicker pieces in half lengthways so that they're all a similar size. Place them on the baking tray, along with the sliced shallots. Spread over the sugar, vinegar, salt and pepper and mix everything to combine. Cover the tray with foil and bake for 10-15 minutes, until the rhubarb is tender but still holding its shape.

Place the tomatoes in a bowl and pour the roasted rhubarb mixture over the top, so that the heat transfers to the tomatoes.

Fry the haloumi slices in the olive oil, until they're golden on each side. Serve the haloumi with the rhubarb mixture and all of its juices spooned on top.

Thursday, November 24, 2022

Coconut sago sundaes

November 19-20, 2022

   

I can smell the mangos every time I visit our local fruit'n'veg shop lately, so I knew it was time to have a go at the coconut sago with lemongrass curd and fresh mango in In Praise of Veg.

I'll say up front that this is a recipe I'm happy to have made once, but I'm unlikely to return to it. Here's why:
  • The kitchen mess. I knew this recipe would take time, but it also took heaps of dishes and a bunch of straining, leaving two distinct piles of slimey lemongrass to clean up.
  • It's more time sensitive than I expected. This looks like something you could make hours before serving, and indeed I made a couple parts a day early. But this caused the sago to swell up and the coconut cream to harden - the texture really wasn't what Zaslavsky intended. My garnishing lime zest lost its... zest. On the other hand, you do need to get started 2-3 hours before you intend to serve it.
  • Eggs. Three yolks and a whole egg? Weird. I don't love separating eggs, and I don't love dealing with the leftovers. (Though I will admit that this choc-date-almond meringue is a good solution for 3 egg whites, and I used it.)
  • I couldn't taste the lemongrass, even though I used more than twice the recommended amount.

So, it was all a bit much effort, and didn't serve the lemongrass flavour I was hoping for. That said, the lime curd was a hit! It's a lovely smooth contrast to the bubbly sago. (I long for a vegan-friendly alternative to get away from those egg yolks, but I haven't achieved it yet.) And we're so ready for the taste of summer we get from mangos. These sundaes skated into the right space - successful enough that I wasn't mad about the effort I put into them, but not so mind-blowing that I'll go to the trouble again.


Coconut sago sundaes
(slightly adapted from Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg)

coconut sago
150g dried white sago pearls or seed tapioca
green part of 3 lemongrass stems
400mL can coconut cream
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon caster sugar

lime curd
white part of 3 lemongrass stems, chopped
zest of 3 limes
1/2 cup lime juice
1/2 cup caster sugar
3 egg yolks
1 whole egg
80g butter, diced

topping
diced mango, or other fresh fruit
lime zest


Place 12 cups water in a very large saucepan and bring it to the boil. Add the sago. Smash around the green lemongrass stems a bit and add them too. Simmer the sago over medium heat for 20-30 minutes, until soft and almost clear. Discard the lemongrass and drain the sago, rinsing it with cold water.

In a medium bowl, stir together the coconut cream, salt and sugar. Stir through the sago and refrigerate the mixture for an hour. (Note that if you store it overnight, like I did, the sago will expand further and the coconut fat will become more firm.)

Place the chopped white lemongrass in a small saucepan with the lime zest, lime juice and sugar. Bring it just to the boil, then turn off the heat and let the mixture infuse for 20 minutes. Strain the mixture and return it to the saucepan. Over low heat, whisk in the egg yolks and whole egg, and continuously stir until the mixture thickens to a custard. Pour the mixture into a food processor or blender and let it sit for 5 minutes or so to cool a bit. Commence blending, and gradually add in the butter chunks. Keep blending until the mixture is completely smooth. Spoon the curd into the bottom of four serving glasses and refrigerate for at least an hour (storing this overnight won't do it any harm).

When you're ready to serve the sundaes, spoon the sago mixture over the curd in the glasses, then garnish with chopped fruit and lime zest.

Monday, November 21, 2022

Fennel cacciatore with polenta dumplings

November 17, 2022

   

I think of fennel as a winter vegetable, but I recently noticed a couple of fennel recipes pop up (one was definitely this salad on I Spy Plum Pie) and learned that it sticks around through spring. This allowed me to try the fennel cacciatore recipe in In Praise of Veg, which I'd mentally filed away for next year.

This is another neat case of dropping a simple dumpling dough on top of a bubbling main meal. Here it's cheesy polenta dollops on top of a tomato-sauced fennel base! If you own the kind of casserole dish that can also be used on the stovetop, it's also a one-pot-wonder. I don't; instead I seared the fennel in two batches in a cast-iron frypan, transferred them to a larger frypan to simmer in their tomato sauce, and transferred them again to a baking dish to cook the dumplings through.

That sounds like a lot of effort, but it really was fine (perhaps Michael, who washed up, would disagree). My polenta-water mixture didn't entirely meld, yet it puffed up well in the oven; its texture was unsurprisingly a little coarse. I used green olives instead of kalamata out of personal preference, and forgot to buy pitted ones. In future, I'd use crushed instead of whole tomatoes and remove the cores of the fennel bulbs for a more even texture.

The recipe made four decent servings - enough to feel satisfied, and gone before we had a chance to become bored with it. I hope we'll remember to revisit it when fennel season rolls around again.


Fennel cacciatore with polenta dumplings
(slightly adapted from Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg)

1 cup polenta
3-4 medium fennel bulbs, stalks and fronds trimmed
2 tablespoons olive oil
3/4 cup pitted olives
2-3 cloves garlic, minced
400g can tomatoes
1 teaspoon brown sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 sprigs rosemary
grated parmesan, to garnish


Place the polenta in a small-medium bowl and stir in 1 cup water. Set the mixture aside to meld.

Cut the bulbs into big, chunky quarters; remove the cores if you like. Heat the olive oil up in a frypan over medium heat. Add the fennel and sear it on each side. Turn down the heat and add the olives and garlic, stirring for just a minute or two. Pour in the canned tomatoes plus at least a half-can of water, smashing up the tomatoes a bit if they need it. Sprinkle over the sugar and salt, and simmer everything for 10 minutes. Start heating up an oven to 190°C during the simmer.

When the mixture is done simmering, carefully transfer it to a high-walled baking tray. Drop tablespoonfuls of the polenta mixture onto the top to form dumplings. Cover the dish with foil or a lid and bake for 40 minutes. Retrieve the tray from the oven and remove the covering. Turn the oven up to 220°C. Sprinkle the parmesan over the cacciatore and add the rosemary sprigs. Bake uncovered for 5 more minutes, then serve.

Tuesday, November 08, 2022

Silverbeet khachapuri

November 6, 2022

   

My friend Erin and I recently traded some things that we can't/won't use anymore, and thus I've acquired three new cookbooks. I want to be realistic about how well I might use these books, too, so I've flicked through each one and bookmarked the recipes I'm most excited to make. (There are plenty more that I'd be excited to eat if somebody else cooked them, but I'm strictly ignoring those!)

This recipe for silverbeet khachapuri is one of the more effortful ones in Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg, but it looked so good that it earned a bookmark. I was in self-imposed kind-of-sick isolation on the weekend, and had enough energy to make a Sunday project of the khachapuri.

Khachapuri are Georgian cheese breads - this version boasts three kinds of cheese, sautéed onion and silverbeet, and a baked egg, all baked into a bread dough that's enriched with milk and eggs. I tried to stay true to the recipe, but ended up using almost an extra cup of flour in my very sticky bread dough and an extra-large bunch of silverbeet. I was intrigued by the fenugreek sprinkle on the original version (and I've included it below), but it wasn't convenient for me this time and I used some oregano-sesame salt instead.

As you can see from the photo above, the results are spectacular, and I especially liked this with a squeeze of lime. The recipe makes far more than the two of us can eat in a sitting, so we made use of Zaslavsky's best tip: you can half-bake the khachapuri, store them in the fridge, then just add the egg and do the final bake when you're ready for seconds.



Silverbeet khachapuri
(slightly adapted from Alice Zaslavsky's In Praise of Veg

dough
1 cup milk, lukewarm
7g sachet instant dried yeast
1/2 teaspoon sugar
3-4 cups bread flour, plus extra for dusting 
2 eggs
1/4 cup olive oil
1/2 teaspoon salt
sesame seeds

filling
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 onion, diced
1-2 cloves garlic, minced
leaves from 1 bunch silverbeet (265-300g), chopped
200g cottage cheese
200-250g mozzarella, grated
200g feta
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground fenugreek
4 eggs

to serve
40g butter
lemon wedges


Stir together the milk, yeast and sugar in a bowl and set them aside to let the powders dissolve. Place 25g of the flour and 100mL of water into a small saucepan and stir them over medium heat until thickened. Take them off the heat and allow them to cool slightly. Whisk the olive oil and 1 egg into the milk-yeast mixture, then whisk in the flour slurry.

In a large bowl, stir together 3 cups of flour with the salt. Slowly pour in the milk mixture and stir until well combined. Continue to knead the mixture to form a dough, adding flour as needed (Zaslavsky assures us that this dough cannot be overworked!). It's ready when the dough springs back from a finger-poke. Drip a little olive oil in a clean large bowl, roll the dough around to lightly coat it, then place a tea towel over the top and let the dough rest in a warm place for an hour.

Use this time to make the filling. Pour the olive oil into a frypan set over medium heat and add the onion. Cook the onion for around 10 minutes, mostly with the lid on, until it's well softened but not browned. Add the garlic and silverbeet, give everything a stir, then pop the lid back on to cook for 5-10 minutes, until the silverbeet has reduced. Transfer the silverbeet mixture to a large bowl. Stir through the cottage cheese, then the mozzarella, then crumble over the feta and stir everything to combine. 

Preheat an oven to 240°C. The aim next is to make four khachapuri, and I laid out one sheet of baking paper for each one. Lightly flour one sheet. Punch down the dough and take a quarter of it to roll out on this sheet. Roll out the dough to roughly a 17cm x 35cm rectangle, continuing to sprinkle flour as needed to keep everything from sticking. Spoon a quarter of the silverbeet-cheese filling onto the dough, spreading it out but leaving 1cm clear on the long sides and 1-2 inches clear on the short sides. Gather the long sides in towards the filling, allowing some of the filling to be captured under the dough. Pinch together and twist the short sides to form an overall boat shape. Cover the khachapuri with a tea towel to prove for a further 15 minutes, and work your way through the remaining three.

Use the baking paper sheets to carefully transfer however many khachapuri you can fit onto baking trays. Beat one egg and brush it onto the visible dough, then sprinkle the egg wash with sesame seeds. Sprinkle the khachapuri fillings with salt and fenugreek. Turn the oven down to 180°C and bake the khachapuri for 10-15 minutes, until the crusts are just starting to turn golden.

Press the base of a 1/3 cup measuring cup into the centre of the khachapuri filling to form a little well. Crack an egg into a glass and gently pour it into the well, repeating for the other half-baked khachapuri. Return them to the oven for 10-15 minutes, until the eggs are just set and the crust is thoroughly golden brown. (Repeat the baking process with any khachapuri you couldn't yet fit into your oven.)

Serve the khachapuri with a 10g slab of butter melting on top, and a wedge of lemon on the side.