Friday, April 5, 2013

Vegetarian Cincinnati Four-Way Chili

When we were first married, we lived about a block away from Chili Macs, a Cincinnati chili shop with an outdoor patio. Because we could bring our dog and the food was cheap and fast, we spent many summer evenings there.

I loved the combination of cinnamon, sweet/hot onion and sharp cheddar cheese, but after we moved to the suburbs I forgot about Cincinnati Chili for years until Tom decided to see if we could make it at home. We’ve made it several times since then – meat and veggie versions – and it’s always good, but never exactly how I remember it from the old 'hood. Still, this most recent version of vegetarian Cincinnati Chili gets very close. The pasta and cheese make it a kid-crowd pleaser, too.

I used a couple of different meat substitutes and added zucchini and carrot because I'm not crazy about the texture with crumbles only. Total meat substitute is about the equivalent of a 12- or 16-oz. package.

Note: The toppings are the numbered “ways.” 1. Spaghetti 2. Chili 3. Cheese 4. Onion. Five-way chili has an additional topping, kidney beans. My kids like to add sour cream (of course).






Vegetarian Cincinnati Four-way Chili

2 tbsp. oil (olive or your preferred)
1/2 large onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 package Morningstar Farms Grillers Crumbles
2 veggie burgers, chopped
1 grated zucchini
1 small chopped carrot
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 ½ tsp cumin
1 tsp. chili powder
Hot sauce (to taste - a couple of shakes)
1 tsp. allspice
¼ tsp cloves
¼ tsp garlic powder
2 Tbsp. cocoa powder (unsweetened baking cocoa) [note: use Dutch Process cocoa, or the best quality you have on hand]
Salt (to taste)
1 15 oz. can tomato sauce
1 ½ cups veg broth
1 tsp cider vinegar
1/2 tsp Worcestershire sauce

1 lb. spaghetti, boiled and drained

Chili Toppings:
1 white onion, chopped
Sharp cheddar cheese, grated (low-fat is fine)
(for 5-way: kidney beans)

Heat oil in large saucepan. Add onion and garlic and cook until onion is translucent. Add the meat substitute, zucchini and carrots. Cook for about 5 minutes. Add the seasonings and cocoa powder, tomato sauce, vegetable broth, vinegar and Worcestershire sauce. Cover and simmer about 30 minutes.

Serve in bowls constructed as follows: spaghetti, chili, cheese and onion.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Vegetarian Cassoulet

I've been cooking, but not blogging. So I'm 1 for 2 on the New Year's Resolution.

Here's a recipe that's really more of a winter comfort food. Of course it was below freezing this first morning of April, so we may have a few more "winter" meals ahead of us before we switch over to the grill.


Your cassoulet will have flavorful green flecks of fresh parsley. I forgot to buy parsley, but it was still pretty yummy.

Vegetarian Cassoulet

Stew ingredients
¼ cup oil
1 onion, chopped
3-4 carrots, chopped
3 stalks celery, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp. dried thyme
½  tsp Penzey’s Parisien Bonnes Herbes (ok to leave out or substitute any sweet, mild herbs – marjoram, chervil, chives)
1 bay leaf
Pepper (to taste)
4 (15 oz.) cans Great Northern beans, drained/rinsed
About 2 tbls. tomato paste
2 (14 oz.) cans diced tomatoes
4 cups vegetable broth
1 large baking potato, peeled and diced
About 1 cup of vegetarian sausage, pan-fried and drained
(I used a Smart sausage labeled “sausage style,” which tastes like a breakfast-sausage flavor to me. I would not use Italian-style.)


Bread crumb topping ingredients
Coarse-chopped French bread, about 4 cups. (Chop the bread into pieces smaller than croutons but bigger than crumbs)
Scant ¼ cup olive oil. Lower-fat option: spray olive oil
Garlic powder
Fresh parsley, about 1/4 cup chopped

Ingredient Note 1: About tomatoes. One meat-containing recipe for cassoulet that we like, from Real Simple, does not include any tomato paste and has only 1 small can tomatoes. It makes more of a white bean stew. This version has a more Italian flavor - they're almost completely different dishes. If this recipe is too in-your-face, try the Real Simple version and either skip the sausage or substitute vegetarian.

Ingredient Note 2: Seasonal options. This is more of a winter dish for us, so I use dried herbs and canned tomatoes. Some versions of cassoulet include fresh chopped tomatoes and fresh sprigs of thyme, which sounds delicious but we didn’t have them on hand in February.

Make the stew:

In a Dutch oven or large saucepan, heat the oil over medium-low to medium heat. Add chopped onions, carrots, celery and garlic. Cook about 5 minutes until everything is starting to soften. Add thyme, bonnes herbes, bay leaf, pepper, beans, tomato paste, canned tomatoes and broth. Partially cover pot and allow to simmer for about 20-30 minutes or until carrots are soft.

Add the cooked sausage and the diced potato. If stew is too liquid, remove the lid completely. Simmer for another 10-15 minutes to allow potato to cook and sausage flavor to mix. 

While stew is simmering, make the breadcrumbs:

Heat oven to 350. Put bread pieces in a largish bowl. Toss with olive oil (or spray generously with spray olive oil). Sprinkle in garlic powder generously, tossing until coated. Spread on a (ungreased) baking sheet and bake for about 10 minutes, turning once and keeping an eye on them – baking time will vary depending on the moisture of the bread and size of the crumbs. Toss cooked breadcrumbs with parsley. 

Serve the cassoulet in bowls garnished generously with breadcrumbs. Recipe serves 6-8.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Multitasking

Conference calls, project planning, document editing - all while veggie stock's simmering on the stove. 



What a steamy, fragrant way to multitask on a work-at-home day. And tomorrow: minestrone!

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Mujadarah (Middle-eastern lentils, rice, and carmelized onions)

This hearty, flavorful dish has become a staple at our house this year. We have it a couple of times a month and the kids are big fans. This is a great choice for anyone who wants to try something a little different or skip meat once in a while. It’s very “meaty,” and lentils are fast-cooking and uncomplicated to work with. The flavors of cumin and cinnamon are a little bit different but this version of the dish does not have flavors that seem exotic to a picky eater. 

I have most of the short ingredient list on hand most days in my kitchen. One drawback for weeknight meals is that it takes about 40 minutes to make. I sometimes cook the lentils the night before or earlier in the day and just refrigerate until I need them. 


Mujadarah (Middle-eastern lentils, rice, and carmelized onions) 

1 cup brown or green lentils, sorted and rinsed
1/3 cup olive oil (or other  vegetable oil)
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
3 turns of the pepper mill (or about ¼ tsp pepper)
4 medium/small or 2 large onions, sliced thin (rings are pretty but I’ve started using a food processor with the slicing disk.)
½ tsp. salt
3/4 cup rice (white)
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper (or similar dried ground pepper)
¼ tsp. cinnamon
Juice of ½ lemon, or about a tablespoon of bottled lemon juice
Optional plain yogurt or sour cream for serving

Cook the lentils. Pick through the lentils to remove any non-lentils first, and rinse.


Spread dry lentils on a white plate to quickly sort

Put lentils in a medium saucepan. Add 2 cups water (or more – it won’t hurt anything). Bring to a boil. Lower heat, cover and simmer about 20 minutes. Drain. 

While lentils are cooking, cook the onions. In a large skillet, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the cumin seeds and pepper. Heat the seeds about 1 minute. Add all of the onions at once. Cook over medium heat, turning every so often, until the onions are mostly brown and carmelized (but not overcooked/burned). This always takes longer than I think – 20-30 minutes.




Remove about half of the onions from the pan and set aside (on paper towels to soak up oil.) Add the cinnamon, cumin powder, and cayenne pepper to the onions in the pan and stir. Add the rice, lentils salt, and 3 cups water and stir. Bring to a boil. Turn heat to low, cover and cook until rice is cooked – about 20 minutes. Add water if needed. 




When rice is cooked, turn off heat and stir in the lemon juice. Taste to see if more salt is needed. Top with the onion you set aside (reheated as needed.) 

Optionally, serve with yogurt or sour cream. Serves 4 generously.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Refried Beans

My kids love refried beans and we buy the vegetarian/low fat canned type all the time. But they don't taste like restaurant-style homemade refried beans. Tom's been playing with this recipe for a couple of years now to come up with a vegetarian version we like that replaces the richness of pork fat or lard with other flavors like lots of garlic, onion and adobo sauce.


This recipe is not difficult and the ingredients are cheap, but it's not something you whip up quickly and the beans should soak overnight. Make it on the weekend when you'll be hanging around the house.

Refried Beans (Tom style)
soaking and boiling step ingredients:
Dried mayocoba beans, about 2 cups (if buying by the pound, about 1 lb.)

Note 1 – if you can’t get mayacoba beans, use pinto or pink beans
Note 2 - for best results, use beans within a few weeks of purchase – they will cook faster

1 onion, chopped coarsely
6 cloves garlic, chopped
2 tblsp. oil
1 tblsp. epazote (optional)
1 tsp. salt (Important: Add salt after boiling, not before)

frying step ingredients:
Olive oil – about 1-2 tablespoons per batch (Note for non-vegetarians – you can also use pork or bacon fat)
(optional) butter to add richness to the olive oil, about 1 tablespoon per batch.
1 onion, finely chopped per batch
2 cloves garlic, minced per batch
Boiled beans from previous step
Adobo sauce (from a can of chipotles in adobo), about 1 tsp. per batch
½ cup queso fresco crumbles, for garnish (optional)

Sort and rinse the beans. Tip for picking through beans – use a white dinner plate, spread out beans (about ½ cup at a time) on the plate so that you can see any pebbles or broken beans easily. Pour the sorted beans from the plate into a colander/sieve. When entire batch of beans is sorted and in the sieve, rinse thoroughly. Put beans into a large pot and cover with about 6 cups water. Soak overnight or for at least 4 hours. (or quick soak: boil beans for 2 minutes, then let them stand for 1 hour).

Drain the soaked beans. Add back to the pot and cover with 6 fresh cups water. Add onion, garlic, epazote, and oil. Bring slowly to a simmer. Cover partially and simmer over medium low heat, stirring occasionally, until tender, 1-2 hours. Check occasionally and if needed add water to cover.

Beans should be a bit soupy but not swimming in liquid. If there seems to be too much, drain off some of the liquid but reserve to add back in. Add the tsp. salt. Using a potato masher, mash the beans (we like them fairly coarse but suit your own preferences.) Heat the oil and (optional) butter in a heavy, non-stick pan (we use a cast-iron skillet).

Note that the frying ingredients above are a little non-specific. This recipe makes 2-3 “batches” in our skillet. For each batch, heat oil and fry onions and garlic until mostly cooked. Add adobo sauce. Immediately add beans and stir. Fry/turn until beans are heated through and flavors blended, adding liquid as needed so that they don’t become dry. Repeat until all batches are cooked.

Garnish with queso fresco crumbles and serve as a side dish or in tacos, enchiladas, etc. We had them with homemade corn tortillas. This recipe will easily serve 8 people for tacos/sides.

We make tortillas; Grilled Chipotle Flank Steak

Inspired by the Aug/Sept. Mexico issue of Saveur, my husband bought the tortilla press we’ve long been eyeing at the local market. Long been eyeing and not buying because the Little Kitchen’s cupboards have a limited amount of extra space at this point.

But he took the plunge and we found that making corn tortillas is great fun for a kid and an adult, because someone needs to press while the other fries. Milo and I had a cozy afternoon making tortillas. 











 

We bought a pre-made tortilla dough, but we want to try making our own next. The tortillas seemed thicker and chewier than pre-made corn tortillas. They were thinner than a sope, but reminded me of a sope in texture. 





t took us a few batches to figure out what “done” looked like in a tortilla. We learned to wait for the bubbles to start to appear in the tortilla. We used oil in the pan, but we’re going to experiment with that next time as well. 



To fill our tacos, we made homemade vegetarian refried beans (next post) and adapted a recipe from Saveur for grilled flank steak (my version is lazier to make and a lot less spicy.)


Grilled Chipotle Flank Steak (adapted from Saveur’s “Tacos de Carne Asada”)


Flank steak, about 1 or 1.5 lb., cut into large but manageable pieces
NOTE:  our market sells arrachera, which is flank steak that’s been manually tenderized using a machine that chops small holes partly through the meat. If you don’t have access to this, you can use a sharp knife to make little slices against the grain of the meat but not all the way through – or skip it – it will still be yummy although chewier. (Google tells me that there is something called arrachera which is a pre-marinated bagged steak, but I haven’t seen that.)

marinade:
4 cloves garlic, peeled, chopped
3 tblsp. oil
2 canned chipotles in adobo, chopped, and a bit of extra adobo sauce (2 chiles, not 2 cans – but still plenty hot. For a milder version, use the extra sauce but only ½-1 chopped chipotle)
1 small onion, chopped
Juice of 2 limes

Put marinade ingredients in immersion blender cup and puree. Put flank steak into a baking dish and pour marinade on steaks, turning to cover. (you could also use a large zip-type bag.) Allow to marinate in the refrigerator for at least an hour.

marinating


Heat a gas grill to medium-high heat. You may want to put down a layer of aluminum foil and spray oil on it. Brush excess marinade off the steak. Cook (turning once) until done, about 6-9 minutes. If steak pieces are thick, cut to test doneness.

delicioso


Serve in tacos: with tortillas, chopped tomato, cilantro, fresh lime wedges, and your other favorite toppings.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Inch by inch, row by row

Milo and I planted these seeds back in March. 


October harvest

How can it surprise me every time? Gardens are the most spiritual places I know.


Baked with skins on, then cooled, peeled, sliced and sauteed with onions.

Pork chops baked with apples and onion, beets, sweet potato roasted with sage

The Garden Song 

Peter Paul and Mary


Inch by inch, row by row, 
gonna make this garden grow
All it takes is a rake and a hoe 
and a piece of fertile ground.

Inch by inch, row by row 
Someone bless these seeds I sow
Someone warm them from below 
Til the rain comes tumbling down