Category: Recipes

  • Sauteed Ginger Carrots with Sesame

    Sauteed Ginger Carrots with Sesame

    3 large carrots, cleaned and peeled
    2 inch peice of hawaiian young ginger (or less of other, stronger ginger)
    toasted sesame & sea salt mixture in a sesame grinder (gomasio)
    olive oil
    salt & pepper

    Cut the carrots on the diagonal, grate the ginger over them as they are finishing cooking (tender but still crisp) in the olive oil, put salt & pepper on them at the beginning of cooking, and serve topped with gomasio.

  • Creamy Chicken & Cashew Buckwheat Crêpes

    Creamy Chicken & Cashew Buckwheat Crêpes

    For the Crepes:
    1 C minus 2 T Buckwheat Flour
    3 Eggs
    2 T melted butter
    1/2 tsp salt
    1 1/2 C (about) almond milk

    Whisk dry ingredients, whisk wet seperately, combine to minimize lumps. The batter should be the consistency of light cream. Let batter rest for at least 30 minutes, ideally 2 hours. Cook on medium high heat in a non-stick shallow skillet or sautee pan, browning on one side until the edges pull away from the pan, and then the other side. Do not add too much batter at once, the crepes should be relatively thin (one coating on the pan).

    For the Filling:
    2 chicken cooked chicken breasts, cubed (we BBQ’d a whole bunch at once with just oil & vinegar)
    1/4 onion, diced
    1/2 red bell pepper, diced
    1/2 crown broccoli, chopped bite size
    5 leaves purple kale, chiffonade
    1/4 C raw cashews
    1/2 C heavy whipping cream
    1/4-1/2 tsp fresh ground nutmeg
    4 T grated parmesan-reggiano cheese
    olive oil
    salt & pepper

    Sautee onion and pepper in olive oil with salt and pepper. When soft, add broccoli. Let cook a bit, get bright green. Add cream, nutmeg, and parmesean. Let simmer until reduced a bit. Add kale, cashews, chicken, cook until chicken warm but not hot. Turn off heat and reserve to fill crepes.

  • Fluffy Buckwheat Pancakes with Peaches

    Fluffy Buckwheat Pancakes with Peaches

    Lately I’ve been on a major health kick, trying hard to stabilize my blood sugar without any other aids. Food, you’ve probably heard, is a drug. I’ve been trying all sorts of strange things from San Francisco’s famous Rainbow Grocery Co-Op, including different types of grain and especially flours like chickpea flour, buckwheat flour, quinoa flour and more (I’ll be writing more about this in the future as I figure out things that taste good, especially pastas).

    This morning I was asked to make pancakes, and so sad that I wouldn’t be able to eat any because of the white flour & sugar, I made some adjustments to the recipe I posted a few days ago for Fluffy, American pancakes.

    DRY:
    1/4 C buckwheat flour
    1/4 C unbleached, enriched, all-purpose flour
    1 T baking powder
    3 T sugar
    1 tsp. sea salt

    WET:
    2/3 C almond milk (unsweetened) *don’t use soy, it makes it tough
    1.5 tsp sherry or cidar vinegar
    1 egg
    1 T sour cream or creme fraiche
    2-3 T sparkling water
    zest of one orange (or lemon)

    Whisk together the dry ingredients. Whisk together the wet ingredients. Combine them. Cook immediately on non-stick skillet with minimal butter at a medium heat. If you wait to cook this batter, do not combine the wet and dry until right before you cook, or you will loose the fluffiness that happens when the vinegar and baking powder meet.

    Using buckwheat flour increases the nutrition in these pancakes, lowers the glycemic index, and makes them slower processing, meaning less of a blood-sugar spike results. They also have a higher protein content.

    Serve with peaches or other fruit on top. I suspect this recipe would also be fantastic with chunks of dark chocolate with chili pepper in it.

  • Black Quinoa Pilaf with Raw Vegetables, Nuts, and BBQ Chicken

    Black Quinoa Pilaf with Raw Vegetables, Nuts, and BBQ Chicken

    For Two:

    1/2 C Black quinoa, rinsed and drained
    1/2 avocado, sliced
    1/4 C raw walnuts
    1/4 C raw shucked pistachios
    1 small shallot, minced
    1/4 C broccoli including stems chopped bite-size
    1/3 orange (or other) bell pepper, diced
    2 inches zucchini, sliced very thin
    1/4 C “live” bean snack, rinsed (sprouted fresh beans like garbanzo, etc)
    3 leaves Japanese Kale, chiffonade
    1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
    1/2 tsp mustard powder
    1 lemon, juiced
    2 T hazelnut oil (substitute other nut oil or olive oil if not available, but this stuff is great for raw food)

    Cook the black quinoa 1 part grain to 2 parts water by bringing to a boil, covering, and immediately reducing heat to low for 20-30 minutes until all water is absorbed.

    Meanwhile, mix all chopped vegetables in a bowl with hazelnut oil, salt, and pepper. Mix mustard, cayenne, and lemon juice separately, and pour over vegetables to mix in. Mix in the nuts.

    Once quinoa is cooked, mix while hot with vegetable mixture to slightly warm and also wilt the kale. Serve with BBQ chicken (we marinade ours as a default in balsamic vinegar and olive oil).

  • Incorporating Raw Food: Quinoa Bowl with Hazelnut oil & Summer Vegetables

    Incorporating Raw Food: Quinoa Bowl with Hazelnut oil & Summer Vegetables

    I’m single-handedly battling my own metabolic syndrome by getting off of corrective pills and embracing a healthier, vegetable rich, flour & sugar low diet. I’ve found an easy way to incorporate more vegetables is to start adapting raw recipes and ideas into my diet. It really is like power food, though sometimes hard to digest depending on what you make.

    Surprisingly, it’s very filling and I was only able to eat half of the below portion in one sitting:

    For One:
    1/2 C quinoa
    1/2 avocado
    raw cashews
    bell pepper (orange or red)
    broccoli
    sprouted beans
    arugula, chopped
    1 snack box raisins
    cayenne pepper
    hazelnut oil
    salt & pepper

    Cook the quinoa (1 – 2, bring to boil while combined, cover and reduce to low for 10-15 minutes until water is absorbed; quinoa is the quickest cooking whole grain & is also high in protein.), meanwhile chop vegetables into diced size after washing and toss in hazelnut oil, salt, pepper. When quinoa is finished cooking, add raisins, salt and cayenne pepper. Lightly mix all the ingredients and serve with sea-salted avocado in top.

  • Organic Roast Beet Salad with Goat Cheese & Blueberries

    Organic Roast Beet Salad with Goat Cheese & Blueberries

    1 bunch wild arugula, washed and drained
    3 small stalks Japanese kale
    1/3 C blueberries
    4 small-medium golden beets
    2 T raw pumpkin seeds
    1/3 lb Capricho di Cabra or other fresh goat cheese
    1 small lemon
    olive oil
    salt & pepper

    Clean and trim beets and place in foil, covering with olive oil, salt, pepper generously. Close foil up, place in oven at 350 for 45 min-1.5 hours. Beets should give slightly to firm squeeze when they are finished.

    Meanwhile, clean produce. Whisk juice of 1 small lemon or half normal lemon with 1/3 as much olive oil, add salt & pepper. Dress the arugula, and the kale after slicing it in thin strips.

    When the beets are finished, clean and serve warm by placing in ice water and scraping skin away with a knife, then slicing into wedges. Assemble salad with goat cheese chunk, beets, blueberries, and pumpkin seeds.

  • Saffron Shrimp Shallot Risotto

    Saffron Shrimp Shallot Risotto

    Carnaroli Rice (eyeball to cover sautee pan bottom for 2)
    olive oil
    1 shallot
    4 C home made chicken stock
    1/2 C dry white wine
    10 good looking salt water shrimp, peeled and deveined
    Heavy pinch Saffron
    Salt & Pepper

    Sautee the minced shallot and the rice in hot oil until the rice becomes golden, adding salt & pepper. Add 1/4-1/2 C white wine, let liquid reduce, and then use HEATED home made chicken stock, to which you have added saffron, to slowly cook the rice by maintaining a low liquid level and neither boiling nor searing the rice. When it’s almost done and the rice is about soft, add the shrimp.

  • Summer Grilling

    Summer Grilling

    Our grill is in full swing these days and on lazy weeknights we often throw on a few mixed squash, a bell pepper, an onion, and sometimes a peice of meat. I cover the vegetables immediately before grilling in olive oil, salt, and pepper (all generously), and marinate the steak in soy sauce and olive or sesame oil for at least 30 minutes before grilling.  For the gorgeous, affordable sock-eye salmon we’ve got available this year, use soy sauce and maple syrup.

    We like to eat it up with some wonderful whole-great hippy bread from La Brea Bakery.

  • No Ordinary Ham & Cheese Sandwich

    No Ordinary Ham & Cheese Sandwich

    Wheat Bread
    Organic Roast Pork Loin slices
    Raw Pumpkin Seeds
    Mixed “Rainbow” Microgreens
    Swiss Cheese slices
    Deli-style mustard
    Green Fig Jam (in this case, from Liguria)

    Throw it together, stick it in the panini machinie.

  • Fluffy, Moist Week-day American Pancakes for Two

    Fluffy, Moist Week-day American Pancakes for Two

    [buymeapie-recipe id=’1′]Blueberry-Lemon American Fluffy Pancakes

    Recently I have been making pancakes a lot (by request of a certain man). Here’s the best pancake recipe for two people or three large pancakes that I have discovered/altered/come up with.

    DRY:
    1 C flour
    1 T baking powder
    3 T sugar
    1 tsp salt

    WET:
    1 egg
    2/3 C milk
    zest of 1 lemon
    1 1/2 tsp cider or sherry vinegar
    1-2 T sparkling water (plain or citrus flavor) or ALE/BEER
    1 T sour cream, creme fraiche, or heavy whipping cream (sour preferred)

    Whisk dry ingredients together, whisk wet ones seperately. I use rough measurements using my eye and/or an actual large table spoon. This recipe is pretty forgiving. Combine the wet and the dry, adding the sparkling water last. Cook on medium to medium low heat to get a nice even color. Flip when sides have firmed up away from the pan and there are bubbles/holes in the batter on the skillet.

    I sometimes add fresh blueberries; the best time to do this is immediately after you put the batter on the hot skillet. They are delicious in this and make the pancake require very little syrup if any at all.

    There is also now a buckwheat flour and almond milk version of these pancakes.

    Also, I made Tonno Carpaccio con Yuzu again as summer is upon us, and took a new, much more appealing photo which is now posted on the entry.