Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Veggie Cooking: Baked Buffalo Cauliflower Wings

Don't let Bertie's expression fool you, he was also impressed by the final product! (11/11/17)
Attempting to maintain a less cruel diet, I haven't eaten meat, fish or chicken since July 1. While I have also tried to reduce/eliminate products harvested from animals, by replacing animal milk with Almond for example, a satisfactory replacement for some favorites has thus far eluded me. By far the two animal-product-based meals I most miss eating are ice cream and chicken wings. With the ice cream absence addressed by a delicious banana-almond milk-peanut butter smoothie, the chicken wing "loss" is one that often aches at my gut, especially on Sundays.

After recently enjoying some baked cauliflower buffalo wings at a local vegetarian eatery, I sought to duplicate the epicurean experience at home. Fortunately an easy to prepare recipe for Baked Buffalo Cauliflower Wings online at Gimmedelicious.com was quickly found, and after carrying it around on my cell phone for a month, my tummy prompted me to action. On this wintry November afternoon, Bertie, our English Springer Spaniel puppy, and I set about making our first batch.

I am an unremarkable cook, choosing rather a clichéd path of learned helplessness when it comes to the kitchen. Even with this culinary handicap, I found this recipe remarkably easy to prepare, in addition to being incredibly rewarding. That the sauce consisted of two favorite ingredients (butter and Red Hot) was a bonus.

A key ingredient: classic Frank's Red Hot! (11/11/17)

Baked once in batter for 20 minutes. (11/11/17)

At this point Bertie had other plans. (11/11/17)


Twenty more minutes after being drizzled with buttery Frank's. (11/11/17)

Plated and ready to SLAY! (11/11/17)
The final product proved an excellent gustatory eexperience. Though too spicy for milady, my stepson and I quickly gobbled down the order of "wings" with a side of dressing. The crispiness of the twice-baked flowerets was solid and the overall flavor VERY reminiscent of the far less fowl-friendly original on which it is based. I am excited to have discovered, and actually tried, a recipe from GimmeeDelicious and look forward to attempting another cauliflower recipe, the Sticky Honey Sriracha Cauliflower “Wings” in the very near future!

Tuesday, July 08, 2014

Makin' Granola!

Finished product (with skim milk) prior to entering my belly. (6/30/14)
Recently, while stopping off at the local megalo-mart for groceries, I attempted to place a bag of packaged granola in the cart for purchase. My wife, who has recently taken to making her own yogurt, suggested that we should try making our own granola too. Back to the shelf went the packaged granola and onto the web went my wife as she pulled up the most basic granola recipe she could find, quickly determining which ingredients we already had and what needed to be purchased. Though I tried to balk at the idea of making something I could simply purchase, my wife assured me that it was very difficult to screw-up the making of granola.

Mom's Best Granola from AllRecipes.com was the first search result to come up and so was the one we prepared. As with most recipes, and especially one's as flexible as granola, I did tailor ingredients to suit my own (admittedly basic) tastes.

Dry ingredients: Rolled oats, wheat germ, raisins, coconut, sunflower seeds, and sugar. (6/29/14)
Wet ingredients: vanilla extract, vegetable oil, boiling water, (6/29/14)
Dry and wet mixed together (with some cinnamon added for good measure)! (6/29/14)

Into the oven. (6/29/14)
Ready to eat. (6/29/14)
The final product (as seen at the top of the post) was very tasty. While flavorful, the texture was further improved by the addition of raisins and, after cooking, banana slices. This issue of texture is one I have with most granola that do not include fruit, and not a function of this particular recipe. My wife was, not surprisingly, also correct in asserting the ease with which the granola can be prepared: it was very easy to do, requiring little more than mastery of dry and wet measuring cups and an adequately supplied pantry. As an added preparation bonus for the cooking impaired--or those like I who successfully feign the inability to cook--it is very difficult to overcook granola.

During the course of the summer weeks ahead, I'm hoping to try some different recipes. in search of one that hits the right mark, and "Mom's Best Granola" was definitely a good place to start!

Monday, January 07, 2013

Hobo Cookin': Chick Pea Salad

The hobbins are in order, now, lets' get to making that dry combo!
Rather than "calling in" vittles from some "bull cook," appearing a "dino" or "dynamiter", "catting in" on another's camp or eating "bullets," I've elected to take the path of a connoisseur "chronicker" and put my tools to use. The easiest way to make this happen is to "shackle- up" a "dry combo," that way, only a "gunboat" or "tomato can" is necessary at worst--no "sizzler" required. Being that I'm a vegetarian, not  a "belly robber," as some would suggest, I'll have no need for "block scrapings" just easy recipes and basic "hoppins". That is the plan at any rate.

Said without the hobo slang courtesy of the Original Hobo Nickel Society's "Dictionary of Old Hobo Slang", once again I'm trying my hand at cooking more around the house. Of course, as my skills are pretty limited (or at the very least deteriorated), I am also starting small. How small? Can-of-chick-peas-label-recipe small!

As a vegetarian, my diet is chock full of legumes. In any week I consume between 2-3 cans of Goya Chick Peas, not including hummus. This meaty little legume goes with nearly anything from salad to soup to (as I most often eat them) simply dumped from the can, rinsed and served in a cereal bowl.

During various Epicurean explorations I've sampled and enjoyed a number of Indian and Greek dishes which include the chick pea as a key ingredient, but, other than as additions to traditional leafy salads, have failed to develop a broader repertoire of use. While not exactly creative or daring, I resolved this week to expand my chick pea palette but making the Chick Pea Salad which has frequently appeared in the cans of my preferred brand of garbanzo beans, Goya.

Look at me: I CAN chop up red bell pepper, cucumber and red onion all by myself!
Add some garlic powder, oregano, balsamic vinegar and olive oil, and...
Presto--Chick Pea Salad!
Though the completed recipe was meant to serve six(!), it only served one, moi. But it did so three times, and served as a main lunch dish served on a bed of greens the first and second times around. Easily packed into two separate Tupperware type containers, and transported in my official Green Lantern lunch bag, it was a very filling and tasty meal. The flavor was tad bland immediately after preparing, but after adding the recommended "Salt and pepper to taste," it was a pleasant meal (and snack).
 As teased on the label there are indeed more Goya recipes available online, and many of them appear to be as easy to prepare as the Chick Pea Salad.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Going Ground Beef-less?

Pasta? Yes. Tomato sauce? Yes. Grated cheese? Yes. Ground beef? Not quite...
Reading and writing can promote change. Sometimes it can motivate change on an historic scale such as the writing (and subsequent reading) of the United States Declaration of Independence. On an individual level, the influence of carefully read (and digested) information at the right time by the right person can also serve to influence the decisions we make. Two months ago, I read Eating Animals by Jonathan Safron Foer, and despite my having seen films and read other sources regarding the topic, for whatever reason I felt more committed to reducing eliminating severely the amount of animal product in my diet.


Despite having been, at different points in my life, been a faux-vegetarian avoiding red meat (including the other white meat, pork) and chicken, it has always been a relatively short-lived experience. Following completion of Foer's book, however, I have taken it a bit further, attempting to eliminate all animal products such as fish, chicken, red meat, and milk. (Cheese is a very tough one for me!)

Following a period of simply adjusting my current meals by taking out at clearly animal products such as tuna fish, ground beef, and milk, I have begun looking for analogs or substitutes to add back in that might simulate the taste and (more importantly) fill me up in such a way that meals are more substantial. While I recognize the better way to go would be to move towards a whole foods/raw diet approach, I still feel the desire to taste (on some textural level) that which can be best described as "meaty."

Like many folks, I have taken advantage of some opportunities to sample meat analogs such as grain burgers, black bean burgers, even broccoli burgers, but my affair with meat substitutes has not gone too far beyond. A few days ago at the supermarket I bought a bag of BOCA Meatless Ground Crumbles with he intention of sample some possibilities for future meals. Nothing fancy, I assure you. I started by introducing a small portion of the crumbles to a jar of tomato sauce in an effort to make that bachelor classic (which I am not, but my cooking skills are not that much greater), pasta with ground beef sauce.

It looks real (sort of), but does it taste like "real" ground beef?

So, how was it? On immediate benefit to the analog was it's attempt to look aesthetically like real ground beef. The commonalities often fade once one goes deeper though. After preparing about 3/4 of a pound of pasta (some for now and some for lunches later in the week), and smothering a plateful (above), I sat down to eat and was surprised to find that it was pretty good despite the texture being chewier than ground beef. Much like my past experiences with chicken analogs, it was also slightly stringy (the best I can come up with to describe it) than traditional ground beef, though I've had similar experiences with beef of the "organic" nature.

If the purpose of eating meatless is to ultimately improve one's health, then a better alternative would be BOCA's Ground Crumbles Made with Natural Ingredients. The fact that the "regular" ground crumbles include artificial flavors and preservatives was a risk I was willing to take in the interest of moving toward a meatless diet. There are, however, better, cleaner, options out there. Until digging around BOCAs website I was unaware that there was a natural alternative as the local grocery stores stock only those BOCA items in the distinctive red packaging. It would seem that I quick trip to the local co-op is in order as I would be more likely to find that item there.

I am confident this transition to a meatless diet will stick, but a key contributor to that possibility will be to continue looking for diversity in the edible options available...

Saturday, June 05, 2010

Adventures in Cooking: Summertime Succotash

The rare swanky cookbook recipe without esoteric ingredients!

It has been quite a while since I have cracked open a cookbook, but back "in-the-day" (about six months ago) when I had time to do so, I had been enjoying working through a number of recipes from Alica "Batgirl" Silverstone's vegetarian cook book, The Kind Diet.

With my lovely wife out of town for the day, I set out to first return our empty cans and bottles to the redemption center and then to collect together the ingredients for Summertime Succotash (page 169). I also planned on preparing a second recipe from the book, Hot Rice with Cold Lemon, Basil, and Tomato (page 151), as a simple complimentary dish.

I am slowly becoming the master of this stove top technique--
I'm a big fan of the bright, popping colors in the pan!


The Summer Succotash is ready to be sent to the refrigerator to chill...


...Until being served hours later with a side of Hot Rice--MMMM!

Breathe in, breathe out… YOU AND I ARE ALIVE!

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

Adventures in Whole Foods Cooking: Recipe 3


I m so pleased that this dish offers a little more color variety...
how many green whole foods dishes can one make/eat?

Only a few more days until Anne and I hit the road for a short respite in the Adirondacks, so I decided to prepare something from the The Whole Foods Market® Cookbook: A Guide to Natural Foods with 350 Recipes for dinner this evening. In the interest of mixing it up, and having gone the chicken and pasta routes already, I chose to attempt the Spring Couscous with Asparagus and Orange for our meal this evening.

I once again went to the market (now a daily trip it seems) for some fresh ingredients (scallions, red bell pepper, asparagus) and it occurred to me that it is much more expensive to eat in a healthy manner than it is to eat in an expedient one. Another $20 dollars alter (I also needed orange juice, some spices and couscous) and I was ready to head home and begin preparations. With my wife at work I like to try to get things as close to "done"as possible so as to surprise her when she gets home--a "trick" which is getting harder and harder to accomplish!


A few new igrediants including Mandarin orange slices... I'm curious as to how this will taste as I've never been a fan of "mixed" dishes--you know, fruits with "hot dishes" and such.


Sauteing might just be my new favorite way to prepare food!


Wallah... all done and ready to eat!

This one turned out to be fairly successful though I have some challenges selecting the appropriately sized bowl for certain ingredients and feel like I'm generating wa-a-a-y more dishes to wash then necessary. I am, however, definitely learning new things with each attempt. Only 348 347 more recipes left to attempt!

Breathe in, breathe out… YOU AND I ARE ALIVE!

Monday, August 03, 2009

Adventures in Whole Foods Cooking: Recipe 2


A quick trip to the supermarket left me with more than enough ingredients to make the Toscana Marinade... with plenty left over for at least five other dishes!

Following last week's successful preparation of Spelt Penne with Peas and Walnuts from a recipe in the "Pasta and Other Warming Starches" section of The Whole Foods Market® Cookbook: A Guide to Natural Foods with 350 Recipes, I thought I'd try something different this evening. This time a gave a "Main Attraction" a try, selecting the Chicken Toscana with White Beans.

With ingredients including fresh oregano, tarragon, parsley and basil, a necessity for preparing the Toscana Marinade, I quick trip to the market was in order first. Fortunately, unlike last week, there were no exotic ingredients that might be too challenging to find at the grocer's, so it was a relatively easy effort getting the materials together. (Once again our garden contributed something to the mix, this time basil for the marinade.)


After cubing the chicken breast and preparing the marinade with blender (!), I mixed it together in a bowl and refrigerated for a few hours prior to preparing the balance if ingredients and the remainder of the recipe for dinner.


Did you ever notice that sometimes things don't look so "pretty" while in the midst of being prepared?


But, once plated and placed on a yummy whole grain roll with a side salad and freshly diced tomato, it's "all good!"?

The final result (pictured above), was very well received by my wife, who was unfortunately the only taste tester home this evening. She even said she preferred to to the meal I prepared previously. I must confess to being excited and proud to have actually made two recipes from a cookbook I'd purchased... a new personal best!

Now, only 349 348 more recipes to go!

Breathe in, breathe out… YOU AND I ARE ALIVE!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Adventures in Whole Foods Cooking: Recipe 1


In a cookbook without pictures you can't select
recipes based on how the "kitchen lab-produced" dish looks.

For the past few weeks months I have stop-started refining my limited cooking skills. Nearly two weeks ago, my wife suggested I buy a whole foods cookbook and begin working through those recipes because they should be 1) healthy and 2) most importantly, relatively easy. Though it seemed a cliched idea, I thought it might be fun to work through an entire cookbook, maybe doing some with my son(s) or wife. First, however, I wanted to go solo.

I've had afresh purchased copy of The Whole Foods Market® Cookbook: A Guide to Natural Foods with 350 Recipes waiting on my shelves waiting for the day to begin attempting to work some culinary magic and with zero "kid activities" scheduled for this evening, I set about putting together a dish for our dinner.

I first settled on three potential pasta dishes (anyone can boil water, right?) and scanned the pantry for what ingredients we might be lacking. Fortunately, I have many bottle to return, so I made a list of ingredients and went to the supermarket to "kill" two birds with one stone. I figured that f I identified the most "exotic" key ingredients for each potential meal, the one I found first would be the guinea pig dish.

First up, from "Pasta and Other Warming Starches," Spelt Penne with Peas and Walnuts:


Due to the absence of some of the more "exotic" ingredients (spelt?)at my local megalo-mart, some substitutions were made, such as kashi standing in for spelt.


I also added some green beans to the peas. Anne had recently "harvested" a large bowl from the garden, so I improvised.


Mmmmm... toasted walnuts! Though I was unsure how others (and myself) would like nuts in our pasta, it went over surprisingly well.


Here is everything all put together in our electric frying pan (doing its best large saute pan impersonation).

The final result (pictured at the top of the post, was very well received by my wife and son. Some of us added Parmesan cheese once it was plated, and there was plenty (intended to serve 6) left over for lunches tomorrow.

Only 349 more recipes to go!

Monday, January 14, 2008

Piping HOT Rachel Ray... B,L,T & P Soup!

Another Sunday, another delicious Rachel Ray dinner, but this time I didn't lend a hand. Though I asked (really, I did... a few times!) Anne put this dish together herself. Not that it wasn't without challenges and barriers, the chief of these being my inability to properly identify just what a leek is. Apparently last weekend, Anne and I went shopping for ingredients together, one ingredient of which were leeks.


When I went to the store on my own this time to pick up a few things I was one for two. The , I returned with BEETS! (After realizing my mistake--it only took a quick phone conversation with my wife--I ran back to the store for the correct veggie... of course, now we have 3 beets to prepare.)

Yesterday, despite the shopping snafu, Anne prepared Rachel's B, L, T & P Soup (Bacon, Leek, Tomato and Potato) Soup from 2, 4, 6, 8, Great Meals for Couples or Crowds, and it was "delish." Served with sliced baguettes, the meal was hearty, spicy and simple.

I wonderfully warm conclusion to a coolish January Day.

Breathe in, breathe out… YOU AND I ARE ALIVE!

Saturday, January 05, 2008

We Heart Rachel Ray!

"Sir, respect your dinner: idolize it, enjoy it properly. You will be many hours in the week, many weeks in the year, and many years in your life happier if you do."~William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863)
For dinner last night Anne and I prepared dinner together using a recipe from Rachel Ray's cookbook 2, 4, 6, 8 Great Meals for Couples or Crowds.

This is about the third recipe Anne has prepared from the book, which she received as a gift for Christmas, but the first I "helped" with. It was great fun to work together, though more than "helping" I was a de facto sous chef... preparing ingredients (browned sesame seeds for the Bibb Lettuce Salad) and moving used pans and bowls out of her way.

In the end, the dinner we prepared from the book was "Anytime is Springtime Supper" which consisted of Shrimp Primavera Pasta with leeks, peas, and asparagus with Bibb Lettuce Salad with Sesame Shallot dressing.




While I have rarely watched her show, I dig the dishes which come about as a result of reading Rachel Ray's cookbook... tasty and an opportunity for togetherness!

Embrassez votre été invincible!

Big Belly Eating Inventory, Day 5

I am generally sitting in the livign room when I write these posts, and out of habit I'll ask my wife "how many calories where in this?" When I inquired about the cany that I ate today, she wondered if I was really going to put that on my blog.

Fortunately for me my wife is always there for support. Some of the inspirational words she shares with me. Some of the best I heard today as we were being playful while I was putting my caloric ducks in a row... 1)"You're going to be like that guy on t.v. who is so fat he can't leave his house," 2) "What if you break your leg and can't run anymore?" 3) "Richard Simmons is going to come visit you!" Now that is scary!

I've added the meals and times I ate today to my inventory. Here goes:
Breakfast--Between 8:45 a.m.
1 toasted Onion Bagel w/All-Natural Hummus (180 cals)
1 8 oz. glass of 100% Orange Juice (120 cals)
2 cups of coffee with a tbsp of half-in-half (40 cal)

Lunch--12:00 p.m.
5 Resee's Peanut Butter Cup (520 cals)
2 pieces of Chocolate Birthday cake with vanilla frosting (450 cals)
2 16 oz. glasses of milk (320 cals)

Dinner--7:00 p.m.
2 servings of Shrimp Primavera Pasta w/leeks, asparagus and peas(500 cals)
1 serving of Bibb Lettuce salads w/sesame-shallot dressing (80 cals)
1 glass of white wine (80 cals)


Total: 2290 cals.
Whew!

Embrassez votre été invincible!