Sunday, November 23, 2014

Tilapia Fish Tacos with Ginger Soy Slaw



The fresh corn tortilla is simple and necessary. You can make the basic recipe on the Masa Harina bag/container or do the following- Sorry, i think measuring with weight and using a simple kitchen scale to do so is the way to go.

Corn tortillas: 200g masa harina, 8.9 fluid ounces of hot water, .1 fluid ounce lime juice, 1/4t salt
--NOTE: use a total of 9 fluid ounces of liquid- it's just a bit of lime juice to add a layer of interest.

Mix together the above ingredients in a bowl then transfer the mixture to a surface and knead for about 2-3 minutes, till your dough holds together and doesn't stick to your hands. Form a large ball, return it to your bowl, cover with plastic wrap, rest for 30-45 minutes. **if your dough is too sticky, add more masa harina; sprinkle with water if too dry.

Put aside and make your slaw.

Purple Cabbage Slaw with Ginger soy dressing

Julienne 1/2 head of purple cabbage for about 5-6 cups' worth
Dice 1 large fennel bulb and its stalks 
Dice 4-5 red radishes
1-2 diced shallots (about 1/3 cup)
dice or waffle cut 4-5 average sized carrots (waffle cut using the zig-zag blade of a mandolin and with every other swipe, turn the carrot 180 degrees and voila! Waffle cut.

Tilapia:
4-6 tilapia filets
salt, pepper
fresh or dried dill

Lightly spray olive oil onto filets on each side. Place them on parchment lined cookie sheet.
Salt, pepper, and dust with dried or fresh dill to taste Bake at 400 degrees for about 10 minutes, till fish is flaky.
(c) Marya Doerfel

Butternut Squash Soup with Spicy Seared Arugula and Toasted Almonds


This is a nice balance of sweet, spicy, bitter, and crunch. Enjoy!

For the soup:
1 Large butternut squash, skinned, de-seeded, and cubed into about 1" cubes
2 shallots cut in about 1/2" chunks (the ones I use are about the size of a golf ball)
2-4 cloves garlic
               - Leave them whole, but smash them to maximize phytonutrients (Robinson, 2014)
               - Use only 2 if the cloves are on the thicker/bigger side
2 T Olive oil
2 T Butter
1/2 t dried sage or one fresh sage leaf (leave whole then remove after cooking)
OPTIONAL: 2 T natural maple syrup;
OPTIONAL: 1/2t sea salt

6-8 oz. chicken stock (use vegetable stock if vegetarian)

Soup Instructions
1. Combine all ingredients EXCEPT BROTH in a 9x12 cast iron or heavier gauge baking pan, cover with tin foil, and cook for 1 hour at 350 degrees or until the vegetables are fork-tender.
2. Allow ingredients to cool slightly then puree, slowly adding the broth until smooth, in a food processor.
--HINT: during the minute or 2 of cooling off time, start heating up your saute pan for searing the arugula 
3. Put soup in a medium sized saucepan (about 2-3 quart) and simmer while preparing the other components of the dish.

Spicy Seared Arugula:
2T olive oil or enough to fully cover bottom of skillet
1/4-1 t. red pepper flakes (these can be hot)
1 minced garlic clove
3 cups then another 2 cups baby arugula

Arugula Instructions
1. In a medium (about 10") caste iron skillet that is preheated to medium/high heat, add the oil.
2. As soon as it swirls around, it's hot enough to add the pepper flakes and let them saute for about a minute.
3. Add the garlic, stir, then quickly add 3 cups of the arugula, turning it as it wilts with tongs. Once the first 3 cups have room, add the other 2 cups and turn the greens to wilt but not fully.

For the toasted almonds:
1 cup coarsely chopped roasted, salted almonds (I just buy them this way so the soup is not so complicated to put together)

Plate your food: Fill your soup bowl with the soup first. Add about 1/4 of the arugula mixture to the middle. Sprinkle with about a quarter of your shopped almonds.

Yield: Serves 4
Prep time about 15 minutes to prep soup vegetables for oven. About 15 minutes to prep other parts after soup comes out of the oven.

(c) Marya Doerfel 

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Green Feta Spread


This is a tangy spread that is nice on toast points. As with all cooking, play with the amounts if you prefer some flavors to be more bold and up front.

2 cloves garlic
1-2 c greens, washed, dried, and tightly packed (kale, spinach, or arugula are all nice)
3 oz tangy feta cheese or feta crumbles (i buy 365 in the white tub at Whole Foods. This is a nice tangy one; others can be way too mild and dry)
1/2 plain Greek yogurt (use whatever fat level you like. Since no cooking is involved, fat content is your prerogative)
1/4t lemon zest
1-2t lemon juice

1. Smash and peel the garlic. Set aside (for about 10 mins- I just learned from Dr. Jo Robinson, in her book "Eating on the Wild Side" that raw garlic is great once certain molecules co-mingle. Smashing, cutting, or chopping will enact the good stuff. See Eating On the Wildside for her resources. FYI, the 10 minute wait period is for when you are going to cook the garlic. BUT since this recipe mixes the garlic with other ingredients, I follow the 10 minute rule to ensure the good chemical reactions happen before I add the garlic to the recipe).

2. In a food processor, combine all ingredients till smooth (including the garlic, once it's been sitting for 10 mins).
TIP: food process the yogurt with some of the greens first. Then as the volume shrinks down from processing, add the rest of the greens (and even more if you want a nice phyto-nutrient punch) and the remaining ingredients.

3. Spread desired amount on toast points or other crunchy base (e.g., celery, endive live. Finish with the salt, pepper, and chiffonade of the green you selected.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Spinach smoothie






Ingredients:

1/2c light coconut milk (or dairy milk)
1/2-1c coconut water (or water or more dairy milk)
3c or more fresh spinach
2 t vanilla
1c frozen pineapple chunks
1 frozen banana (i peel then freeze once bananas are too brown or bruised to eat.
**frozen fruit means you don't need to add ice to this smoothie!)

1. Blend the coconut milk, coconut water, vanilla, and spinach until smooth. I blend for about a minute because I do not like getting a chunk of spinach in my drink.
2. Add the pineapple and banana, blend till smooth.
Serve immediately or freeze for frozen dessert.

Tip: when pineapples are cheap, i buy a few, and when they are practically over ripe, i chunk them up and freeze them. Frozen pineapple makes extra thick smoothies so you might need a bit more liquid.

Carrot Cupcakes

If you have a food processor, this is a very easy recipe and is fairly guilt-free. I'll post a picture next time I make them!!

Makes about 10 cupcakes at roughly 175 calories each. Add 2T of honey if you need them sweeter. But you won't.

- 5-6 uncooked cleaned but not peeled raw carrots (fewer if your carrots are on the large side; 6 if they're somewhat average... of course, if you've been buying baby carrots all these years, you might have a hard time remembering what a real carrot looks like!!)
- 2-3 very ripe raw bananas. 2 if the bananas are on the bigger side; three if they're somewhat petite. (hint, if you have some ripe bananas but not ready to use them, unpeel them and stick them in a freezer container till you do need them)
-6 T butter
-3 large eggs
-1 t vanilla
-2 t cinnamon
-1/2 t nutmeg
-1/2 t allspice
-3T minced raw ginger (optional and not recommended if you're making this for kids-ginger can be too bite-y for them)
-1t salt
-1/2 c old fashioned extra thick rolled oats (I use Bob's Mills, but any old fashioned ones will do)
-1/2 c whole wheat flour
-2 t baking powder
- 1/2c coarsely chopped dried sour cherries or other dried fruit (avoid grape-juice infused varieties)

1. Using one of the shaving/shredding accessories on your food processor, shred your carrots.

2. Put the carrots in a different dish so you can then switch to the regular food processing blade (the kind that has 2 sharp knives that sweep around in the bottom of your food processor).

3. Put the shredded carrots back into the food processor and process them till they're more minced and finely grained. They won't get pulpy without added liquid, but they'll be close.

4. While processing, drop in the bananas, butter, eggs, vanilla, cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice, optional ginger, and salt.

5. In a separate bowl, whisk together the oats, flour, and baking powder. Add the wet ingredients and fold together till blended. Add the dried fruit.

Using a large ice cream scoop, fill lined cupcake tins to about the top, if not with a little heaping hill on top.

350 degree oven, about 20 minutes or until cake tester comes out clean.

These are delicious and moist as-is. If they're not sweet enough for you, add 2 T of honey, but seriously, carrots and bananas do it for me and the cherries give a punch of sweet.

You can ruin the whole point of low- or no-sugar "cupcakes" and frost these with cream cheese frosting: 1/4 stick of butter, 1/2 cream cheese, 2-3 c powdered sugar, 1 t vanilla OR 1 teaspoon lemon juice plus some grated lemon peel.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Fava beans with pear and figs

2-3T olive oil
1 cooking onion
1 pear, coarse chop
2 stalks of fennel, diced. Fronds in that are ok
4-5 cloves garlic
6 or 7 dried figs
1-3 carrots, coarsely chopped
2 guajillo chilis (this only adds to the flavor profile but will not add spice. Use a whole fresh jalapeno to add spice)
2 cups dried fava beans*
2 c dry white wine (I used a sauvignon blanc)
1 quart veggie broth

Saute the onion in olive oil in the bottom of a heavy dutch oven (e.g., le crueset) until it starts to brown a little. Add the pear and cook another minute.till the pear softens just a bit. Add the fennel and whole garlic cloves, carrots, cook another minute till the fennel green brightens. Deglaze the pan with the wine.  add the rest of the ingredients and be sure the beans are fully covered by the liquid. Cover, place in 300-350 deg oven for 2-3 hours, till beans softened but not mushy. Check halfway through cooking time to ensure there is enough liquid for the beans.

Once finished, look around for the garlic cloves, mush them, and incorporate them.

*variation- if you prefer a "creamier" bean texture, use large lima beans (gigantes). The favas were more al dente when I followed the above recipe, which was nice.

I didn't salt or pepper my recipe, I find there is enough salt from the broth. That's a taste thing, too!
Please add suggestions or variations below!