August Meal Plans

A review of the meal plans featured last month

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July 30 2012

White beans and cousa squash in shallot-tarragon sauce; tomato, cucumber and rye salad with basil
Tofu and green beans in spiced tomato sauce; brown basmati rice and kale pilaf with brown mustard seed
Tempeh, eggplant and kale in blood orange sauce; kamut, carrot and zucchini pilaf with lime basil
Black bean salad with beet and sweet corn; potato and turnip in thai basil sauce

August 20 2012

Tempeh, collard green and tomato salad seasoned with brown mustard seed; Mixed vegetables in basil-tahini sauce
Green lentil, cucumber salad and buckwheat salad seasoned with lemon basil; mild patates bravas, indian style
Eggplant, summer squash, tomatoes and red russian kale in thai basil sauce with millet, green bean and carrot pilaf
Spiced red lentils with green kale; brown basmati rice with green pepper and beets

August 27 2012

Rice noodles and broccoli in portabello-smoked paprika broth; mixed potatoes and beets with spiced tomato
Spiced black bean with cabbage and broccoli greens; heirloom tomato-cucumber salad with kamut and rye berries
Eggplant and green pepper in caper-basil sauce with spiced green beans and zephyr squash
Patty pan squash, pinto bean and collards in thai basil sauce; spiced brown rice with zuchinni, romanesco and cousa squash

Farmer’s Market Recipes

The demo at the Iowa City Farmer’s Market went well, technical problems aside. Here are the recipes from that morning.

Spiced Cabbage
Brown mustard seeds add an earthy nuttiness without overshadowing the simple flavor of the cabbage.

1 small cabbage, quartered, cored and thinly sliced
1 tbs whole brown mustard seed
1 tsp lemon juice
1/2 tsp salt
1 tbs sunflower oil

Heat pan with oil to medium-high. Add the mustard seeds. They should sizzle and pop within a few seconds. Add cabbage. Toss to distribute oil evenly and continue cooking for 4-5 minutes, stirring often. Cover, add salt and turn heat down to medium-low and cook for another 5 minutes or so. Turn off heat and add lemon juice.

Cucumber and Lemon Basil Salad
I try to use lemon basil whenever I can find it. Such a delicate delicious summery flavor.

4 Cucumbers
1 large tomato, heirloom if possible, finely chopped
3/4 cup vegenaise or mayonaise
1 tbs capers, finely chopped, or blended to a paste
1-3 tsp red wine vinegar
Salt to taste

If you have time, peel and seed the cucumbers, and cut into 1/2 inch dice. Mix the vegenaise or mayonnaise with the tomato, capers, vinegar and a pinch or two of salt and stir in the cucumber. Let sit 10-30 minutes in the fridge and check for salt.

Green beans in spiced tomato sauce
An Indian style dish that brings another method to use our prolific green beans.

2 tbs sunflower oil
2 tsp whole cumin seeds
6 cloves garlic, roughly chopped
1 inch cube ginger, peeled and roughly chopped
1 tbs ground coriander
4 cups tomatoes (about 2 large tomatoes), diced
1/2 lb green beans
1-2 tbs fresh lemon juice
Generous sprinkle of fresh ground black pepper

Blend the garlic and ginger with 4 tbs water in a food processor. Heat oil in pan and add whole cumin seeds. They should sizzle and darken within a few seconds. Add the garlic ginger paste and cook for a minute or so, then add ground coriander, stir to mix and immediately add diced tomatoes. Cook for a few minutes then add green beans and a half cup of water or so. Bring to a boil, cover and turn heat down to a simmer. Cook until beans are done, 2-7 minutes depending on size and age of beans. Turn off heat, stir in fresh lemon and fresh ground black pepper.


Hot Sauce

Sometimes it’s difficult to use all the hot peppers that are available here. I like to make hot sauce to use up those peppers before the go down at the bottom of the fridge.

1 small onion, large dice
2 cloves garlic, peeled
1 cup peppers, roughly chopped
1 tsp sunflower oil
1 tbs white wine vinegar or lime juice
Salt and pepper to taste
1-2 cups water

Heat oil in pan to medium high and add onion and garlic. Sautee for 3-4 minutes, then add peppers and turn heat down to medium. Cook, stirring often for 5-7 minutes, or until peppers are thoroughly softened. Blend to a smooth paste in a food processor with vinegar or lime juice. Transfer to a bowl and add 1-2 cups water and salt and pepper to taste. Stores in fridge for 3-4 weeks.

Meal Plan July 23 2012

New flavor of veggieburger available now for purchase via the web store. Hopefully on shelves by end of August. Original veggieburger is available also. I will be adding an extra week to the schedule as enough folks are interested, so meal plans available next week still. Then 2 weeks off and returning August 20. I will have chocolate cake available for pick up next week too. $8 for 2 or $12 for 4. Click here to order. Pick up Monday next week.

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  • Green and yellow squash, broccoli and green beans with rice noodles and mung beans
  • Tofu, beet, cucumber salad with roasted potatoes
  • Tempeh, tomato, cabbage salad with roasted cumin ; barley with amaranth, cucumber and sweet corn
  • Black bean-sweet corn veggieburger with collards and kale; spiced rice with sweet potatoes

Home Fries – How to use your leftover potatoes 1

Home Fries

4 or 5 boiled potatoes
1/4 cup sunflower oil

A great way to use leftover boiled potatoes. In fact even if home fries were your plan you’d want to boil them up the night before because the key to perfect home fries is that the potatoes are cold when you fry them up. I always like to have some cold already boiled potatoes in the fridge just in case we’re hankering for a breakfast hash up. The point of this is that when the home fries are fried, the already cooked potatoes are cold. This is the key to perfect home fries.

To boil the potatoes
Scrub the potatoes and add enough water to cover the potatoes by an inch or two. Cover and heat on high until boiling, add a generous sprinkle of salt – probably a tablespoon for 4 or 5 potatoes, then bring it down until the water is simmering well. Unless the potatoes are small, check them 15-20 minutes after they start to boil. Pierce one with a small sharp knife. When it slides through like butter, they are done. Drain them and let them cool down, then put them in the fridge overnight. Do not use a fork to test them and try to avoid piercing them more than is necessary.

Transformation to home fries
If you have a non-stick pan, it may be best to use it. In this case add oil to the pan and heat to medium before adding potatoes to the pan. If you are using a stainless steel or aluminum pan, heat the pan to medium high before adding the oil. Either way add the potatoes to oil that is already hot. This is the other key to perfect home fries. The cold potatoes are placed into hot oil.

Add the potatoes to the pan, then let them cook a little before turning them with a metal spatula to mix. If you are using a stainless steel or aluminum pan, you may want to turn the heat down to medium, to avoiding over-browining (sometimes called burning). After turning, let them cook a little before disturbing them again. Leaving them alone after turning helps them develop that golden crispy edge that we all love, as well as avoiding them sticking to the pan. Depending how hot your oil is they may take anything from 5-15 minutes to become golden. Aim for 10.

Meal Plan July 16 2012

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    Seared tofu & grilled broccoli in fresh basil sauce; brown basmati rice with carrot & lemon
  • Glazed tempeh and green beans in tomato sauce with buckwheat, raisins and kale
  • Black beans and sweet corn with roasted garlic-mashed potato and daikon radish
  • Red lentils with cabbage and gujerati-style mixed squash

Relishing the variety of squash this week at the market – cousa, zucchini, romanesco, patty pans. This week cooked in the Gujerati style, using brown mustard seeds flashed in hot oil. Potatoes are in force at Oak Hill Acres, reds, purples and whites so kept it simple with roasted garlic mashed potatoes.

If you like buckwheat, try cooking them with raisins, adds a delicious treacly sweetness.

 

Overcome your fear of eggplant

Fall classes at Kirkwood Community College have been finalized. Link here to a class showcasing EGGPLANT recipes. Learn a wide variety of preparations to expand your repetoire when this unique vegetable comes into season.

All classes listed here, including kale, squash, Italian, 3-course vegan meals and more. Classes held in Iowa City, IA.

The Culinary Socializer – Lemon

If you’ve ever made a meal and it wasn’t quite there, just didn’t have the pzazz or the flavors that make you sing. Perhaps it’s a soup that sat in the fridge for 3 days, or a rice pilaf that’s flavors have sunk.

Try adding a little lemon juice. Just a little, too. Not enough to give the dish a lemon flavor, either. Just enough for it to enhance the other flavors that are already there. If a dish is a party, think of lemon as a great conversationalist. Someone who draws the other party-goers into talking, not someone who takes over the conversation and doesn’t let anyone else speak.

I have used lemon juice in this way for years in the restaurant business, often finding that it’s the time that I use the LEAST amount of lemon juice that produces those great comments that we chefs love (even if we say we don’t!). I’m talking 1/16 of a teaspoon per order here. So 1/4 of a teaspoon for a four person soup, or pilaf. Try it, you’ll be pleasantly surprised.

Meal Plan July 2 2012

Weekly meal plans focus on vegetables as the center of the vegetarian diet.

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This week experimented with scalloped potatoes using coconut milk and flax seed as the creamy binder. Dash of white wine vinegar worked wonders to set of the sweet cremy oniony sauce. The etestament to these is that my family ate them all down the day before I had a chance to photograph them!

The Thai soup is in the style of Tom Kha, using tofu instead of chicken and generous quantities of ginger and fresh squeezed lime along with fresh basil. Paired with the earthy barley and deep sweet of the raisins, a very satisfying combination.

I’m a great fan of the cousa squash, which seems to have a little less bitterness than zucchini, although the shelf life is shorter. The season is now.

  • Cousa squash, snap peas and beet greens in spiced curry sauce with kohlrabi-cucumber and mung bean salad
  • Glazed tempeh and broccoli in roasted garlic and tomatoes; scalloped potatoes and kale
  • Thai soup with chinese cabbage, bok choi and tofu; barley, zucchini and raisin pilaf
  • Coconut chole with green beans; brown rice with caramelized onion and napa cabbage

Kale from Echollective Farm, Mechanicsville IA
Bok choi and kohlrabi from Salt Fork Farm, Solon IA
Potatoes, green beans and snap peas from Oak Hill Acres, Atalissa IA
Beet greens and Chinese cabbage from Grinnel Heritage Farm, Grinnel IA
Cousa squash, zucchini and broccoli from J.T.’s, can’t remember where! IA

Meal Plan June 25 2012

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Again managed to incorporate as meany greens as possible this week. Beet greens, Chinese cabbage, collards, kale, bok choi, dill, mint all incorporated this week.

  • Tofu and snap peas in caramelized leek sauce with spiced rice and beet greens
  • Curried black-eyed peas and kale with barley-collard green pilaf
  • Tempeh with spiced beets and dilled chinese cabbage, spinach and beet green slaw
  • Mixed vegetables in miso sauce with potato and kohlrabi in tomato-mint sauce

Featuring vegetables from Echollective, Salt Fork Farms and Grinnel Heritage Farms.

As always veggieburgers are available to pick up every Monday at Hillel House. Pre-order by emailing burtfamilyfoodservices@gmail.com