Thursday, July 31, 2008

a week of eating simply

Just as I mused that I eat out without snapping, obviously the same thing happens at home. There is a seasonal dip in my blogging of recipes. Not because I cook less in winter but because natural light is not abundant when I am in the kitchen. I probably eat at home more in these cold months but rely heavily on old favourites.

With much talk of simplicity, frugality, SOLE food and the like in our Antipodean corner of the blogoshpere, I thought I’d share some of the simple meals I have been cooking lately.

Last week it was a return to chilli (chile/chili – take your pick) beans. As much as I prefer legumes home cooked I have taken to buying Bio Nature organic kidney beans, chickpeas and crushed tomatoes by the slab. Grated parsnip has become the latest addition to the mix, imparting a subtle sweetness. Along with some carrot, masses of onion and green herbs it makes getting the minimum 5 serves a day of vegetable a cinch. A double batch lasted a couple of days and served with brown rice it made us all healthy and happy at Chez Foodnazi (except the cats who’d really love it if I turned carnivore).

Curry in a hurry is one of my ‘no brainer’ meals. Some Mae Ploy red curry paste, a little extra onion and ginger bubbling away with a tin of coconut milk and an equal quantity of vegetable stock (forget “lite” coconut milk which is the same price as full strength, just use half as much and water or stock). Made on an end of the shopping week night, it featured sweet potato, a can of chickpeas, the sad remains of a cauliflower and a small block of tofu. This really was pulling together the refrigerator scraps and padding them out with a trusty tin of beans. With a squeeze of lemon, a little palm sugar and fish sauce, it jazzes up almost any combination of veggies.

There was one bought meal. On Saturday the sick on called for chicken soup. If I’d been creative I may have searched the freezer for some of the wings we buy for the cats to chew on but I’d forgotten about that and anyway, cooking with meat is a much neglected skill of mine these days. The best I could rustle up at short notice was a hot and spicy number from the local Thai restaurant. I got a Tom Yum and Pad Thai for myself and enjoyed every mouthful.

The pumpkin soup was also a double batcher, providing lunch on a work from home day. The second day the garlic was stronger but so too was the lemongrass, which balanced each other out nicely.

Monday I got waylaid so it was another meal in a hurry. This time some gluten-free pasta and a ‘sauce’ of onion, garlic, anchovy, cauliflower and a tin of tuna. Easy, tasty and satisfying.

On Tuesday I got the urge to make a non-coconut curry. Googling "vegetable + tomato + curry", up came a reprint of one of Stephanie Alexander’s recipes written for children. It is worth reading it just to appreciate the way she is teaching a new generation about mise en place. “Desley’s mum’s silverbeet, potato and tomato curry” is just that. I had no fresh coriander and I played around with quantities but in essence it is an easy, roast and grind your own spice base with potatoes simmered in a Indian influenced, tomato sauce. The silverbeet came from my garden - adding that extra bit of virtue.

After cooking for a week, the SE resurfaced last night. It was the end of the shopping cycle once more and when asked what I wanted for dinner, all I said was “use up what is in the fridge”. What ended up on the plate was a tray of roasted vegetables (sweet potato, carrot, cauliflower and zucchini) and some sautéed onion and garlic, with more silverbeet and rocket from the garden stirred through buckwheat pasta. The slightly caramelised, roasted veggies with the fresh greens made a great combo.

I love these meals made out of necessity, that call for a little imagination.

My past week or so of simple eating wasn’t planned but I think some synergy is afoot. Kathryn is doing the same thing at the moment. Whether it is thriftiness, necessity or creativity that spurs you on, how do you find putting together meals with only what is at hand?

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Friday, July 04, 2008

The 1 week wheat-free challenge: Day 7

2 x boiled eggs on pretend gluten-free toast.

Pad Thai with prawns (rice noodles, prawns and minimal other ingredients – egg, tofu, veg plus fish sauce and peanuts).

Seared tuna (medium rare) with leftover Sri Lankan curry (a surprisingly good combo).

2 x mandarins.

Dagoba chocolate

Fluids: 1 espresso, 1 brandy and soda, 1 peppermint and liquorice herbal tea, water.

Notes: I’d planned to eat out at my local Thai restaurant for the final night of the challenge but the SE vetoed this due to the amount of leftovers we were accumulating. So the Pad Thai for lunch, not my usual choice, was an attempt to find a half decent Thai meal and choose what I’d usually have.

The GF bread still tasted crap and I struggled to finish an otherwise enjoyable breakfast.

So you want another pussy pic?


So the challenge is over. There were no breaches that I was aware of. Tomorrow I'll post about what I learnt from the experience. Thanks for your support over this week.

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Thursday, July 03, 2008

The 1 week wheat-free challenge: Day 6

Oats soaked in rice milk, dried cranberries, golden kiwi fruit, hazelnuts and crumbled corn thins.

Masala Dosa (fermented lentil and rice flour crispy ‘pancake’ with potato and spice stuffing, served with dahl, veg curry and sambals).

Mandarin.

Sri Lankan chickpea curry (with broccoli, cauliflower and onion) plus brown rice.

Mototo ‘ice cream’ with warm cherries.

Fluid: 1 espresso, water, 1 brandy and soda.

Notes: I’ve always loved dosas but amidst the wheat-free week the lovely crispy texture at the edges was particularly delicious. The SE cooked again – yippee!

What no pretty food pic? Here's a kitty instead.

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Wednesday, July 02, 2008

The 1 week wheat-free challenge: Day 5

Porridge with rhubarb and apple compote.

2 x rice crackers.

Gluten-free pasta with onion, silverbeet, garlic, sun dried tomatoes and tuna.

Mandarin.

Chilli beans (kidney beans, onion, parsnip, carrot, tomatoes and lots of delicious spices) with brown rice

1 piece of gluten free (Country Life) toast with vegemite.

Fluid: 1 espresso, 1 elder flower cordial, water

Note: had a business meeting scheduled in a café before (rather than at) lunch. I noticed that it would have been easier to eat vegan than wheat-free with what was on offer. Needed something starchy for lunch so hit the GF pasta.

The NB came back with a supermarket bought GF loaf so had to try it. What can I say? It looked promising but tasted of nothing. A bit like the soy cheese, I find it hard to get excited by the “pretend” foods, though these days I actually prefer GF pasta over regular.


Could a cup a day keep the undertaker away?

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Tuesday, July 01, 2008

The 1 week wheat-free challenge: Day 4

Fruit salad with raw pistachios.

Salad: mixed greens (rocket, beetroot leaves, parsley), leftover roast potato, tuna, real mayonnaise.

Dried apricots.

Pelecing style sambal of mixed Asian greens (lots!) and tofu, with rice.

Fluid: fresh orange and lemon juice, 1 espresso, water, 1 glass of wine (well the bottle was still open).

Notes: Turned down the chance to go to Babka for lunch. I just couldn’t risk the temptations of one of my favourite bakeries.

Here's a pic is of yesterday's ice cream. Made from rice starch and egg yolk, with coeliac friendly other bits it tastes surprisingly good.

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Monday, June 30, 2008

The 1 week wheat-free challenge: Day 3

Porridge with rhubarb and apple compote, soy milk.

Mandarin.

Spanish omelette: potato, onion, garlic, olives stuffed with sun dried tomato, eggs, and parsley.

Pan fried baby snapper (dusted with cornflour), roasted potatoes with garlic and rosemary, salad (rocket, tomato, cucumber, olive oil and balsamic vinegar.

Dairy-free (gluten and soy-free) vanilla ice cream with warm sour cherries in light syrup (thickened with arrowroot).

Fluids: 1 brandy, 1 sauv blanc, 1 espresso, water.

Notes: After a couple of weeks of too much eating out both the SE and I have been craving home cooked food. He came home today with two of the freshest baby snappers I have ever seen. We’d usually bake whole fish but the chef was feeling a little whimsical. The non-wheat flour worked well and the skin was crispy. Not to be outdone I whipped up an impromptu dessert.


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Saturday, June 28, 2008

The 1 week wheat-free challenge: Day 1

Porridge: oats, water, nutmeg, grated apple, sultanas, soy milk (malt-free), maple syrup.

Leftover brown rice bake: Rice, tomatoes and lots of vegetables.

2x vegetarian dolmades.

Artichoke stuffed with quinoa, parsley, anchovies, garlic and almonds. (A variation on this recipe).

Baked mushrooms marinated in tamari, mirin and ginger, stuffed with tofu, garlic, spring onion, ginger, parsley and tamari.

Fluids: 1 espresso, 1 sherry and lots of water.

Notes: A day at home, so not too many temptations to stray. Leftovers made lunch really easy.

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