lunedì 18 ottobre 2010

Recipe * Aubergines Parmigiana

Italian cuisine, much to the benefit of contemporary vegetarians, relies on a hard core of veggie delicious dishes, and there are many examples in the rural cuisine, such as high-protein soups with cereals and legumes, but also the so called holiday dishes, one being the Aubergines parmigiana, real veggie deli. Any DOCG Italian family enshrines at least a couple of versions of the recipe, that usually strongly differ. The following is the one I've seen putting in the oven since I was a kid:


Just picked sun ripened tomatoes from the kitchen garden
Oregano
Home made extra virgin olive oil
Basil
Chili
Rosemary flavoured salt
Salt
Onion (very little)
Aubergines
Mozzarella cheese
Grana Padano

Slice the aubergines and arrange these on a large plate. Sprinkle with a generous amount of salt. Place another plate on top, and then place something heavy on top of that (such as a big pot filled with water), let them drain the bitter water for at least one hour, dry with dishcloths, deep fry (possibly in extra virgin olive oil) and strain the oil with paper. On a side chop the tomatoes in small cubes and cook a fresh sauce, warming the oil with, browning slightly one or two fine chopped slices of onion, add tomatoes, oregano and at the end basil, you can eventually mash the sauce in the masher. In a oiled baking pan add in sequence: sauce, aubergines, mozzarella, grated Grana Padano, and again to create 3 or four layers, the last one being aubergines and some spoons of sauce. Bake in hot oven for at least 30' (medium-high temperature).

Variations: in bianco grilled aubergines and mozzarella (three layers, two of aubergines and one of mozzarella) with basil, as side dish.

©2010
Special thanks to the WR community

Recipe * Basmati high-protein insalata di riso

Also in full summer or mid autumn, while one can smell BBQs at every corner, there might be the need for a high-protein and fresh dish...

Eggs for omelette
Zucchini
Onion
Oregano
Graped fresh lemon or citron rind
Homemade extra virgin olive oil
Maize
Red kidneys beans (boiled or canned)
Azuki beans (boiled or canned)
Freshly picked basil (or fresh peppermint)
Quick o or other cottage cheese
Freshly picked sun ripened tomatoes from the kitchen garden 
Capers in wine or winegar
Salt
Kombu algae
Small champignon mushrooms sauteed

Boil the basmati rice, strain al dente. On a side, chop and cook aubergines in warm extra virgin olive oil with a slice of onion, sparkle with salt and oregano. Chop tomatoes and season with salt, extra virgin olive oil, capers and basil (or fresh mint) and let it stand for some minutes to create the natural sauce. Sauté the squashes (possibly roman costata) and sauté the mushrooms in a small pot (covered with lid) with extra virgin olive oil and herbs provinciali. Fry a thin omelette and cut it into rhombs.  Mix all the ingredient in the bowl and add  a sparkle of kombu algae, sprinkle with freshly picked lemon or citron graped rind and serve.

 ©2010
Special thanks to the WR community

Recipe * Basmati rice salad with acacia honey

One of vegetarian's best friends is rice, rich in proteins, highly versatile, perfect if combined with legumes and... well whoever can use a pan has a vague idea of the countless recipes of risottos, sweets, savory, spicy and the infinite variations of rice based dishes. This is a simple and fresh recipe.
 
Really young costata romanesco zucchini just harvested from the kitchen garden (freshness is crucial)
Oregano
Graped fresh lemon or citron rind
Homemade extra virgin olive oil
Maize
Red kidneys beans (boiled or canned)
Tofumini
Acacia honey
Freshly picked rosemary and sage (or fresh peppermint and thyme)
Quick o or other cottage cheese
Freshly picked sun ripened tomatoes from the kitchen garden 
Rosemary flavoury salt
Salt

Boil the basmati rice with rosemary flavoured salt, strain al dente. On a side, chop and season with salt, extra virgin olive oil, and a mince of fresh rosemary and sage leafs. Let it stand for some minutes to create the natural sauce; chop the young costata romanesco zucchini (they have to be small and fresh, to maintain a flavour similar to fresh almonds) and add to the tomatoes, no cooking needed. In a bowl add red kidneys beans, tofumini (tofu seasoned some days before with extra virgin olive oil and herbs), maize, cottage cheese, acacia honey, sage, after the tomatoes have drained their fresh juice, add rice, sprinkle with freshly picked lemon or citron graped rind, mix and serve.

 
 ©2010
Special thanks to the WR community

Bases * Raw tomato sauce

Sure, it is advisable to eat the most fresh vegetables and fruits possible to benefit the most out of the the nutrients from food, so, seen that Autumn is a warm season and it is still possible to enjoy simple, quick, high-vitamines recipes. One being the raw tomato sauce, that can be served as a dressing, a starter, a refreshing soup. 
Fresh and red sun ripened home grown tomatoes

Basil
Parsley
Home made extra virgin olive oil
Home made extra virgine olive oil with chilly
Rosemary flavoured salt
Salt
Garlic (just rub on the chopping board)

Wash, chop with a knife and mince in the kitchen robot and later with the masher (or straight in the masher) the tomatoes. On a side prepare a basil and parsley chop on the (possibly wooden) chopping board where the garlic has been slightly rubbed, spice the tomato juice with salt, extra virgin olive oill, and mince. Leave it on a pan for an hour or so, then add some drops of chily extra virgin olive oil. Perfect for a cold pasta, or a warm pasta especially adding some cubes of mozzarella, adding capers and olives, as a refreshing soup, and as a starter with toasted bread.

Variations: in case of intolerance to garlic, instead of basil and parsley, use for the mince other herbs, such as fresh mint, tyme, savory, etc. or a cream of rosemary. Another variation is adding pepper, or chopped avocado, tabasco sauce, and pennyroyal leafs, or freshly picked raw minced zucchini with oregano.
 
Vegan

©2010
Special thanks to the WR community

domenica 17 ottobre 2010

Bases * Tomato sauce

Let's go on with conserves and preserves... unfortunately tomatoes get a bit sour during the pasteurization, so the best way to keep unaltered the summer fragrance and taste is to cook and can the sauce or to add additives that would alter the quality and the genuineness of the preserves.

 
Homegrown tomatoes
Oregano
Home made extra virgin olive oil
Basil
Chilly
Rosemary flavoured salt
Salt
Onion (very little)

Warm slightly the extra virgin olive oil in a big pot to cover the bottom, add the finely chopped onion, that doesn't have to become light brown, and chilly, add the whashed and tomatoes chopped in big shot, add rosemary flavoured salt and some oregano. Boil, stirring from time to time. Press with the masher and boil again with some basil leafes. Bottle, boil the jars in a big pot with a lid covered with water for at least 12 minutes, leave it covered wait that they chill naturally and turn upside down before storing in a dry, dark and cool place.

Variations: after pressing the sauce in the masher add pan fried aubergines*, or pan fried zucchini, or peppers and zucchini, or mushrooms; capers, olives.
*Suggestion. Aubergines need a 2/3 hours process to eliminate the bitter water before pan frying: wash and dry, slice, put them on a flat surface, add salt and weights to press them in order to squeeze the water out of aubergines in the sink. After 2 or 3 hours dry them with a dishcloth and pan fry.   
Vegan.
©2010
Special thanks to the WR community

Bases * Small Hillock and Cherry Tomatoes Bottled

The small hillock tomatoes and the cherry tomatoes are at the hearth of Italian cuisine and are quite easy to find fresh in groceries, but the taste of the ones bought at the market all year round and those ripened under the Mediterranean sun is slighly different. With all the good faith in the warm strenght of the Israeli sun it is quite difficult to believe that they might be naturally ripened in open field, warmed up by sun rays. They grow ripe between September and October and prefer mild climate, but how can we preserve unspoiled the sweet freshness? The freezer burns themm and the sauce alter slightly the taste, so bottled!

Small home grown tomatoes
Fresh rosemary sticks

Wash accurately and dry with flawless clean dishcloths the tomatoes, bottle them in jars wholesome with a freshly picked rosemary stick, boil the jars in a big pot with a lid covered with water for at least 12 minutes, leave it covered wait that they chill naturally and turn upside down before storing in a dry, dark and cool place.
Perfects for bruschette, seasoning of pizza and pasta, and for all the recipes with hillock and cherry tomatoes.
Variations: Slice the tomatoes; add capers and olives.

Vegan.

©2010
Special thanks to the WR community

Bases * Giant Ox Tomatoes in a Jar

Stick to the bases and keep going with the recipe for preserving the fillet of giant ox tomatoes, delicious for quick preparations, and to flavour eggs, seitan, mopur, pan cooked tofu.

Homegrown giant ox tomatoes
Freshly picked rosmary

Wash and accurately dry the giant ox tomatoes, fillet them, stuff the fillets in the jars with a rosmary branch, bottle and boil the jars in a big pot with a lid covered with water for at least 12 minutes, leave covered till chilled and turn upside down before storing in a dry, dark and cool place. 

Perfect for the preparation of fresh sauces and gravies.

Vegan.

©2010
Special thanks to the WR community

Bases * Tomato Juice

Just for a start... the basic ingredients are crucial to any diet, the veggie one requires particular attention to food preservation and to the preparation of doughs. So, as many other people, I decided to cultivate a contemporary urban kitchen garden. Healthy habit with strong meditative powers, that put in touch with nature, with ourselves providing all the basic nutrients,  the vitamins and the good flavours of the Earth for a 0 mile diet.

All this sounds very complicated, but is not. Plants grow in the fields but also on terraces and balconies, and if well groomed can give some satisfations. If there is no terrace, garden or balcony available for a kitchen garden, it'll always be possible to ask the municipality if community allotment gardens are available.
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By the way, the most creative part, after the satisfactions in witnessing a small seed becoming sprout and then little plant, is food preservation.

We said we were starting from the beginning and so, that's the recipe of tomato juice preserve.

Ingredients: home grown tomatoes

Wash the ripen tomatoes, press them in the tomato press, for the skins and the seeds, bottle the juice, cork up and put the bottles and/or the jars in a big pot with a lid filled with water to cover the bottles, boil  for not less than 12 minutes, leave covered and wait till they chill. A good habit is to put the jars and the bottles upside down when out of the water before storing them in a dry and dark place.

To use for the preparation of spiced or pizza sauces.  When preserved tomatoes tend to loose the summer freshness and the sour might prevail (in case, add a pinch of sugar to the sauce while cooking) plus they steam a bit during the pasteurization, so the juice might need more spices than usual if you wish to prepare a Virgin Mary.  

Vegan.

©2010.2011
Special thanks to the WR community




venerdì 15 ottobre 2010

Veggie blog

This is my first post on the new veggie cuisine blog.

I decided to start this blog when I decided to switch my diet from carnivorous to ovo-lacto-vegetarian, for no ethical or health reason: I simply started to visualize what was actually in the plate when I was eating an animal, well, one can dine on different foods.
I have to say that I am gourmand for many non vegetarian dishes and, even though I look quite fit, I love eating, looking for small little tiny deli groceries. Culatellos, prosciutto, salami and cold cuts, the typical just sliced mortadella with pistachios savoured in white just-out-of-the-oven pizza, my mother's dainty tuna fish pasta, relish crispy bacon and eggs sunday morning breakfast when it's snowing, radicchio and crispy pancetta affumicata, meat based BBQs, fettuccine with boar tomato sauce, arrosticini sticks, the taste of the ocean in the freshly fished raw sea urchin pulp, or even just the yummy quick and easy-to-cook grilled salmon steaks, scampi and shrimps, lasagne.... Never had something against this food, not at all! this is just a small list of delis I simply love, and that I'm not going to eat any longer.

More than a great effort and sacrifice, it's a labour of Hercules. I was going hungry as if I quit smoking, and I needed determination, stubborness, and a looots of patience in cooking.

Starting a veggie diet, means cooking, cooking and cooking.

I do am used to multicultural and macrobiotic cuisines, but don't lie to ourself: veggie food taste horrible most of the time, not to eat raw, in any case. So hands on pans, pots, a  lots of vegetables, dressings picked here and there from the various world cuisines, and let's try to make veggie food appetizing. 

Plus, replacing fish and meat with products available in any grocery, such as veggie balls and soy burgers, is not an option for several and solid reasons. First of all soy burgers do not provide the necessary nutritional intake for a balanced diet, which might be risky for your health; non animal proteins need to be synthetisized by the human body and, if Nature in its absolute perfection thought about that for what concerns meat, we cannot assert the same for vegetable proteins, that's why it is vital to combine foods even if one is on an ovo-lacto-vegetarian diet, which includes eggs, milk and dairy products. You keep feeling hungry, and really hungry if you are a woman with menstruation.  

The very first question that comes to one's mind is 'If I don't eat meat, what am I going to eat'?. That's such a common sentence to be the title of a book, best seller in new age and subsequent forms of, sometimes a bit too hippie, holistic trends bookshops. Luckily we are in the era of Internet, and this saved me several tours in veggie bookstores that would have probably turned me into a vegan in a few days or would have made me get mad at myself and at my foolish ideas...after all, I've always been eating meat and now, just because, I'm going to step in the the first fast food restaurant and wolf down all the menus I can! So finding the infos on the Net was very useful.

After some weeks eating eggs, dairy products, soy stew, I googled some recipes and I found an incredible variety of delicacies, easy to prepare if dedicating a consistent amount of time to cooking and finding ingredients often unobtainable in normal groceries.

I found out that veggie diet is based on proper combination of different elements and that proteins really matters. Yes, I know, I should have realised that just reading some pages from the best sellers in the hippies bookstores, but I didn't wat to turn vegan nor to step into the first fast food on the road.

Generally speaking combining cereals and legumes is a good idea, eating fresh fruit and vegetables - careful to the bowels especially for the first weeks - cooking soy-protein-rich food, eat some brewer's yeast  and some other elements such as algae, walnuts and nuts, sunflowers seeds, tahini and so on, is not as bad as it might seem.

Starting a veggie diet means choosing a path and go for it: it just becomes a lifestyle that concerns many aspects of everyday life.

Just to give some examples, in one of the most prestigious gelaterie in town I found out that in the peach icecream there was fish glue, so I realise that one has to carefully read the ingredient's list on every product in the shopping list.
I love stiletto and all the wonderful Made in Italy genuine leather boots so perfectly designed and hadcrafted  with the mastery that characterize the Italian small and medium handicraft and design companies, but clearly, how can I wear leather if I don't eat neither meat nor fish? I have no intention whatsoever to say goodbye to my stiletto heels, nor to wear Birkenstock, flip-flops, gumboots with a suit, but seen that for the next season my choice will be oriented towards cruelty free products. But what I can do is either wear synthetic fibres very cheap shoes or order a bunch on the net hoping I'll find at least one pair of the size, or I'll have to plan a shoe-shopping-trip to London, where I'll find cruelty free shoes designed by Italian designers abroad, but that's another story. In any case, my diet will impact my lifestyle.

Going back to the kitchen, I myself experimented some recipes found on the Net, adapting them to my personal taste and I thank all the people who posted on the Web their cookbooks, I found useful advices and practical suggestions for a veggie lifestyle in accord with contemporary living. With this blog I hope to be inspiring in some way, and clearly to find easily links and recipes.

©2010.2011
Special thanks to the WR community