Wednesday, April 28, 2010

go short to live long!

I love Homaro Cantu, as you may know.
His work really makes me think about food in new ways. Recently he conceptualized the long-held idea of eating low on the food chain in a gently new manner: just shorten it - i.e. if one desires chicken, eat what the chicken eats to approximate the flavor. You are what you eat, right?
Such a simple idea not only would help minimize bioconcentration of toxins and the environmental burdens of animal farming, but also would lower energy expenditures per edible calorie. And it is cool. Click the links and be inspired.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Ikea is modular... Food!

So we tried the ikea pizza. The nutrtional information is for 1/6 th of the gigantic strip- shaped pie, which conveniently comes subdivided into three square pieces right from the freezer. Once cooked, each of those happens to reveal that it has been conveniently sliced into four subsections already. So, no pizza cutter required. Bueno! Tool-free assembly! (no Allen wrench contained therein, either)

This is an all- food, veggie pizza made with dairy cheese. After cooking, the veggies tasted pretty fresh. The crust is very bready. There is minimal sauce, and it is a little flat in flavor. That said, for the price, compared to many store-bought deep frozen vegetable or plain pizzas, this one, while not the winner, is certainly palatable enough, and is easily fixed with some salt and red pepper. I like the instant portion control (we just popped it apart and didn't even heat the whole thing), decent ingredient quality, minimal packaging, and - true to its Ikea roots - no tools required.
A 6-serving ikea pizza is about five bucks.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Pizza wars continue!








That's right. A friend of mine would probably claim this is a sign on the coming apocalypse, but I am about to share the virtues of Ikea pizza with you.













As you (maybe?) can see, no particularly scary ingredients...
Vegetarian (not vegan) friendly.






Plus you can get a good chunk of your saturated fat requirements in one place!

a small start

I'll start with a recipe.
I posted it once before and it got lots of good reviews from my tofu-eating foodie pals. The original post can be found here.

but here's an easy high-protein mostly vegan meal that takes minimal time to prepare and is tasty.
La Nuit de la Grande Citrouille, Charlie Brown!
(Aromatic maple pumpkin tart with sage-polenta crust and red wine laquered wild mushroom ragout with sage and brown butter)
(yes, I know the butter isn't vegan)
(and that that description is silly)

preheat oven to 350 degrees.

ingredients (all of this is rough, I didn't measure):
1/2 cup corn meal
1.5 cu water
salt
about a tablespoon of finely minced (back cut for dryness) fresh sage

one can, 15 oz., of Libby's pumpkin (just the plain pumpkin, not the preflavored pie mix)
3/4 cup of silken reduced fat tofu
about a teaspoon of finely minced Chinese ginger
a small dash of ground red cayenne pepper (I always put this in a pumpkin pie, as an aside)
a few shakes of five spice powder
one shake of nutmeg
salt
2 tablespoons maple syrup

2 cups of mixed wild mushrooms (we had shitake, crimini, and oyster)
2 tsp of olive oil
1 tsp of unsalted butter
the red wine (a medium bodied cab) that was left in my glass (I think a dry chardonnay would have been better, but I wasn't drinking that)
some more fresh sage (this is just rolled up and sliced finely into the pan with kitchen scissors) - circa a teaspoon
salt

maple syrup (and a little Pecorino Romano as a garnish would have been good, but I didn't want the fat)

easy:

in a saucepan, put the water and salt it to taste (I think I used about 2 tsp). boil it. whisk in the corn meal, cook it until it is done over medium heat (maybe a minute or so), toss in the sage, whisk it all together, and remove from heat. set aside to cool a bit.

spray a nine inch metal pie pan or whatever you have around with some cooking spray. I just use the olive oil kind since I like the taste.

Press, using a hand rinsed in cold water (no sticking), the polenta into the pie pan, then put this in the oven and cook it for about 15 minutes.

Meanwhile, make the filling: dump filling ingredients into a bowl and blend until smooth, then salt to taste. I used a stick blender. You use whatever you like.

when the "crust" is kinda set and dried a little, dump in the filling, smooth it out, and put it back in the oven.

I cooked it at about 350 (the oven in my apt is unreliable, but that is what my thermometer said. Incidentally, I set the oven to 390 F, so as ever, YMMV) for about 50 minutes whilst I accomplished other goals.

when it was done, I turned the oven off but left the pie in there while I made the mushrooms: put the olive oil in a skillet. get it warm but not super hot. put the mushrooms in, whole. toss in a pinch of salt. toss the mushrooms every so often to prevent sticking. when they're mostly done to your liking, toss in the sage. continue to cook. toss in the butter, let it brown very slightly, and lightly caramelize the outsides of the flat mushrooms. deglaze with whatever you were drinking at the time (kinda like a reverse monte au buerre), toss a bit more, the whole thing will thicken and be delicious.

to serve: cut a nice slice of your semisavory pie. put some of the mushrooms on top. pour on a teensy touch of real maple syrup, and finish with a sage leaf and a little Romano grana if you have it and are feeling fancy (or just eat it, if you are me, while watching William Shatner interview Jenna Jamison).

If you are a hungry person, 1/4 of the pie is a serving. roughly, this contains 14 grams of protein, 12.5 grams of sugars, and under 200 calories. plus the mushrooms, which, depending on how many you eat, are the source of fat in this dish.

Have vegetarian(ish) food ideas? a great recipe to share? tried this and it sucked? let me know!

Monday, April 19, 2010

The Seitanic Verses

here's the idea: meat is probably bad for you. There is an itinerary of pro-meat, pro-dairy, pro-consumption, pro-prepared products world being shoved at all today. I believe this is unhealthy for body and planet.