16 September 2012

Roasted Pears





Roasted pears! A fun foundational idea with endless improvisational finishing possibilities. Our pears were going bad, so I roasted them. Now I want to roast or broil every type of fruit at least once to see what happens. Once you scoop out the middle of the pear, you can fill it with whatever you dream up - melted butter alone in the center would be tasty, or add some squeezed lemon, sugar, and fresh vanilla bean. This time around, I filled the pears with walnuts and roasted the whole thing together. This warms up the nuts while toasting them just on top, so it maintains their raw buttery quality. Another delicious route would be to toss the nuts in melted butter, maple syrup or sugar and some spices, then roast them separately for a more candied quality. Serve warm with ice cream, alone, or next to some loaf cake.

INGREDIENTS
pears peeled with a peeler with the center toughness scooped out
maple syrup optional
lemon
earth balance or butter
cinnamon
salt
walnuts crushed

INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Heat the oven to 350. 
  2. Arrange the pears on a baking sheet. 
  3. Brush with maple syrup and squeeze some fresh lemon on top.
  4. Plop a bit of butter in the center and sprinkle everything with cinnamon and a touch of salt.
  5. Fill up the middle with walnuts and finish with a bit more butter on top.
  6. Pop in the oven until golden and caramelized. Watch the nuts to make sure they don't burn.
Enjoy! xo, J





13 September 2012

Crispy Tofu & Peppery Shaved Celery

This is based on a dish from Mark Bittman's 101 Summer Salads. I've had this list magneted to our fridge for almost a year, but its recipes truly shine during the summer. I've tried about a dozen of these salads, and so far, they vary in greatness. But man, the tasty ones are so brilliant, it's worth some trial and error to sniff them out. The genius of these salads is their SIMPLICITY; their minimalist ingredients, instruction, and effort. Bittman gives you a great starting place and it's playtime from there. I had a lot of fun with this one. The celery is a refreshing crunchy contrast to the warm crispy-on-the-outside-soft-on-the-inside tofu. It's filling, a standalone meal. You could throw in some orange juice and zest for the tofu glaze, serve over rice/quinoa or by itself.

INGREDIENTS
celery (1 stalk bunch) sliced a little thicker than paper thin; I use my mandolin for this, but can be done by hand or maybe with food processor attachment
organic (preferably sprouted) extra firm tofu (15.5 oz) pressed between paper towels with weight on top for at least 30 minutes to soak up the water (this allows the tofu to crisp up and absorb flavor better), then diced into small cubes
peanut or olive oil (1 T) or as much as you want; I always use as little oil as I can get away with
peanuts (1/3 cup) crushed
chili flakes (1/4 t)
freshly ground Szichuan or regular peppercorns
tamari or soy sauce
toasted sesame seeds
lemon

INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Beat some oil and tamari together. Spread the diced tofu out on a baking sheet then brush them with oil/tamari mixture. Pop in the oven and broil until golden crispy.
  2. In the meantime, heat up oil in a small saucepan until slippery, then add red chili flakes to infuse the oil. After a minute or so, add the crushed peanuts and stir until golden and aromatic.
  3. Toss shaved celery, sesame seeds, spicy peanuts, crispy tofu, fresh ground pepper, and tamari together, finish with squeezed lemon to taste.
Enjoy! xo, J