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Category: Food
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Simple vegetarian broccoli lasagne
Honestly, when preparing this I forgot to add the vegetarian ‘minced meat’ and it was still delicious. Would also be great with mushrooms! Find your own, buy fresh or soak dried mushrooms from your stock.
First, mix together ingredients for the sauce. I used tomato sauce, tomato paste, water, sambal (chili paste) and bruschetta mix (dried tomato, garlic and oregano). You might use a ready made tomato sauce (there are really good ones without additives, check the label) or make your own.
Grease the bottom and sides of your oven dish with olive oil. Now add a first thin layer of tomato sauce at the bottom, then break small broccoli florets (no bigger than would fit a teaspoon) and distribute evenly in the sauce. Now add a layer of minced veg meat and cover with thinly sliced onion rings. Cover with a layer of sauce.
Now take a sheet of lasagne pasta (I used whole-wheat), break it if necessary and use as much/many as you need to cover a full layer in the oven dish.
Repeat the layering steps with a bit of sauce, broccoli, minced veg meat, onions, more sauce. Add another layer of pasta.
Make the last layer with broccoli, onion and sauce. Top with grated cheese (I used Gouda).
Put in the oven at 200 degrees for 40 minutes. Serve with (rocket) salad, extra virgin olive oil, salt and pepper.
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Tortellini carbonara with fresh parasol mushroom and zucchini
We found a beautiful bunch of parasol mushrooms (in Dutch: grote parasolzwammen) in a neighbor’s garden. She was super friendly and gave us one, after we explained how delicious they supposedly were – although we hadn’t tried before.
(Btw: if it’s not the right season or foraging is not your thing: you could substitute the parasol with any other tasty mushroom. Just try to not choose champignons, they’re booooring ;).)
Of course at home I first double checked that this really was a parasol mushroom, but really you can not really go wrong with this one.
People have asked me but I will not explain on this blog; you’ll have to do your own research, find a trustworthy field guide and learn from an experienced forager before you can safely find and eat wild mushrooms.
One tip: start with learning by heart which ones NOT to eat ;). Then proceed with the ones that are unmistakeable, the so called beginner’s mushrooms.
So. I hope your worries have been addressed ;). This parasol mushroom turned out delicious! One of the best I have ever had, I may even like it over many porcini (eekhoorntjesbrood) I have had.
Clean the mushroom (I rinsed it because there was a lot of earth/dirt), check that it is fresh and not contaminated by small animals. Cut a shallot or small onion and a garlic clove. Sauté in oil for a few minutes until light golden brown and fragrant, then add the zucchini and mushroom pieces plus pepper and salt (not too much!) to taste.
Meanwhile, boil the tortellini as long as needed (see packaging).
For the real carbonara: break an egg in a bowl and remove half of the egg white. Now beat the egg. Grate some cheese, Parmesan would be great but I used ripe (oude) Gouda cheese and that turned out really well, too.
Drain the pasta as soon as it’s cooked al dente. Put back in the pan, add the egg, stir, then add in the cheese and some black pepper.
Serve with the vegetables. I put them on top of the pasta. Italians would serve them separately, no doubt.
Don’t forget the olive oil. Olive oil rocks, especially with mushrooms and pasta.
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Popped chestnuts
Great news! Autumn has come (in my part of the world) and that means it’s time for mushrooms and chestnuts. I love Autumn for its abundance in foods, colors and weather types ?. Plus it means my birthday is coming up. I heard autumn children suffer from winter depression less often and that fits my experience. I really appreciate all seasons equally.
Now for the chestnuts ?: go find a beautiful spot for foraging, look out for the green spikey bolsters on the ground. Use your foot to roll them open so you can take them out by hand easily. You can easily bring home several kilos but be sure to leave at least as much for the animals and other people!
At home, use a small, sharp knife to carve a cross in the skin. Then put in the oven at 220 degrees for about 25 minutes or so. It’s now easy to remove the skin and enjoy your yield. Best served warm!
Pro tips for removing the skin:
1. Use a teaspoon. Slide it under the skin (convex side up) and gently wiggle. Saves your nails :).
2. The longer you hear the chestnuts, the dryer they become and the easier it will be to take them out of their skin. Find the middle way that is perfect for you (the above mentioned 25 minutes is a good start!)
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Bliss balls with walnuts and honey
An easy way to serve something special: bliss balls! These are nutrient rich, filling little snacks and they look wonderful.
You can vary them endlessly. I happened to have pineapple juice and decided to boil that down to a syrup, but you could just as easily use honey, agave, rice syrup, apple juice etc. As long as it’s sweet and sticky it’ll do the job ?.
Here’s the recipe for the ones I made today:
Boil one cup of pineapple juice down to a syrup. Turn off the heat when the syrup is light golden; it is starting to caramelize.
Add nut granola (crunchy muesli with nuts, leave big chunks out) and dried shredded coconut and mix well. Everything should be thickly coated with sticky stuff.
Now part the whole bunch in halves and to one half add sesame seeds and to the other, add cacao. Bring to taste with salt if needed (I didn’t). Play with the ingredients (add dry or wet) so that you can form balls that stick together easily.
Now roll the chocolate balls in coconut and the sesame balls in sesame.
Serve with walnuts and if you have a sweet tooth, drip with honey or agave syrup.
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Vegan sushi salad bowl
Not sure I am even really allowed to use the word sushi here, as it has not so much to do with highly skillful processing of raw fish but all the more with combining the other usual ingredients of sushi into a delicious salad.
Combine pieces of avocado with pieces of raw bell pepper (and/or other veg you have lying around, such as carrot, spring onions or lettuce, the more the merrier). Sprinkle with toasted sesame seeds and dulse (seaweed) flakes, then dress with sesame oil, salty soy sauce (I use Kikkoman) and maybe some rice vinegar to your liking.
Enjoy ?
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Golden oat milk
A winner combo: homemade oat milk with turmeric (kurkuma).
The health benefits of turmeric are abundant, just search the web and you’ll find lots of info. One of the favorite ways of taking it, is the famous drink ‘golden milk’: a mix of milk (any kind) and turmeric with added oils and black pepper for better absorption by the body.
The recipe is simple: to my 15 minute oat milk (recipe here), simply add a tablespoon of turmeric, a tablespoon of santen (coconut cream, or use half a can of coconut milk, or fresh of course if you are somewhere tropical) and a few twists of fresh black pepper.
After blending and passing the milk through a sieve, add honey/agave syrup/any other sweetener (I use honey and vanilla sugar) to bring the sweetness to your liking.
I even like to add this to my coffee sub! Or simply drink as is, a small glass a day, especially when your throat aches as turmeric is a master infection killer when used topically.
One last advice: this stuff is used for cloth dyeing and with good reason. It stains like mad. Wear something old ;).
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Baked apple with cinnamon
Delicious, old fashioned, simple: my love came up with these when he remembered one of the favorite dishes his mother used to serve when he was little. I took the liberty to add walnuts, hope that’s ok Hanni ;).
So here we go, sweet memories:
Cut the heart from your apple(s), cut in thick slices of at least 1 cm and bake for about 5-7 minutes each side in a frying pan or oven (200 degrees Celsius) with butter or coconut oil.
During the last few minutes, add crumbled walnuts.
On the serving plate, add cinnamon and, if you have a sweet tooth, honey or agave syrup.
Incredibly soothing, this simple yet comforting and delicious dish. Like laying your head in your mom’s lap.
I remember my mom made stuffed apples with almonds and raisins (I think), I’ll have to ask her and will share here if she still remembers!
What’s your favorite mama dish? Enjoy your trip down memory lane and please share below :).
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Bell pepper, apple & mint salad with avocado
Light and fresh ?
Slice bell pepper, cucumber and avocado, chop apple and thinly cut mint leaves.
Combine everything and top with thin shallot rings, if you like that. My love preferred it without and removed them :).
Dressing: olive oil and lemon juice, salt and pepper. Keep it simple!
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Oat milk
Cheap and simple. Once you get the hang of it, it will only take 15 minutes to make a liter (or more) of delicious oat milk, way cheaper than any store bought brand will bring it to you.
What you’ll need: a fine sieve (I use the one from my tea pot, it’s about 8cm in diameter and perfect for the job), a blender, a bowl and a glass bottle for storage.
Ingredients: oats, water, sweetener (dates, figs, banana, honey or sugar, for example), salt and optionally vanilla or vanilla flavoring.
I use 1 cup of oats and 5 cups of water, which amounts to exactly one liter in my blender.
Then I add 3 figs or 5 dates, a bit of salt and two teaspoons of vanilla flavoring.
Start only with the oats, water and sweetener. Blend for about 30 seconds. Not too long or it will be slimy. It doesn’t have to blend ‘all the way’.
Pour a tiny bit of the mixture through the sieve into a big bowl. Taste, then add salt and vanilla to taste, blend for another few seconds and then pour all of the mixture into the bowl through the sieve, scraping the bottom of the sieve with a spoon.
Transfer from the bowl into a clean glass bottle and store in the fridge for up to three days.
I use the oat residu to add to my overnight oats (see recipe below). The fruit content even helps with the predigestion of phytic acid, as explained in that blog post :).
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Oven roasted prebiotic vegetables
Prebiotic vegetables create a favorable climate in your gut for probiotics (good bacteria) to grow. Among prebiotic vegetables are: leek, onion, garlic, chicory and fennel.
This dish has leek, fennel and chicory. The white and light greens color beautifully with the drizzled olive oil.
Keep it really simple: slice the veggies in halves lengthwise, brush with olive oil and put in the oven on 180 degrees Celsius for about 30 minutes or until some ends start to color brown.
For serving, drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper.
Great with bread.
