Thursday, November 29, 2012

Kuss-kuss (couscous)

Of all the holidays in the year, Thanksgiving is my favorite. It does neither have to do with politics nor religion, and on top of that, it gives my husband a chance to use his Weber grill in November. He did a very fine job (love you honey!) and we feasted on a bird weighing 15 pounds twice. Saturday we were six people, including one vegetarian, and the day after we had the same turkey, holiday style, again with different sides. Sad but true, I will never have the time to blog all this. What is left of the big feast is another 2 pounds of finest turkey meat, with a slight BBQ flavor, and now the question is, what to do with it.

When it comes to leftovers, my all time favorite is couscous, which is so easy to prepare and can be combined with almost anything. In my (carnivore) view it goes especially well with little pieces of poultry. Here is the basic recipe:
  1. In a bowl (that can also be used for serving) pour one cup of couscous, and two cups of boiling water, with a little bit of salt. 
  2. Wait for approx 10 mins, until the couscous is soaked up with water. 
  3. Allow another 30 mins. to cool completly. 
  4. Meanwile, prepare whatever you want to combine with the couscous and marinate with two table spoons of lemon juice and 6 table spoons of olive oil, add salt and pepper to taste.
 And here is today's recipe for step no. 4:
Steam one cup on peas, and allow time to cool (about 30 min)
Combine peas with half a cup of dried cranberries and half a cup of salted pumpkin seeds (or cashew nuts). Add the lemon juice/olive oil mixture as described above and enjoy!

Oh, and by the way: This couscous is excellent when paired with a salad of red beet, which leads me directly to  my next post...c u soon!

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Crunchy Muesli

Once upon a time, there was a little boy named Leopold, three years old, and his favourite meal was risotto (which is remarkable for a three year old, don't you think so?). His mother made a lot of effort to feed him well, and used to make porridge for him every morning. One day he stopped eating what his mother lovingly prepared for him, and instead he poured some milk into a bowl, threw his oats in and munched away on them. Leopold, listen: If you want to try something different for your breakfast, you may be interested in my DIY chrunchy muesli, which was inspired by this recipe and it goes like this:

1. Preheat oven to 150°

2.
In a bowl, mix
300 g oats (small ones) with
100 g shredded coconut.

3. In a small pan, mix
100 ml honey with
3 table spoons of vegetable oil
over slow heat until the mixture is really fluid.

4. Combine the oats/coconut with the honey/oil mixture in the bowl and give it a good stir.

5. Spread everything on a baking tray and put in the oven for, in total, 30 minutes or until golden. After 15 minutes, open the oven (taking in a heavenly scent of honey) and give the mixture another stir to make sure that all oats are toasted really well.

6.Let cool completely on the tray and add
200g nuts (chopped into pieces, although the photo shows whole nuts) and, if mummy agrees,
100g small chunks of chocolate

And then do the usual thing: throw some of this in a bowl, add some milk, cold or warm, and
enjoy your breakfast! And: Happy Namenstag Leopold!







Friday, November 9, 2012

Pumpkin Curry a la Plachutta

For those of you who have never heard of the Austrian 'king of Tafelspitz' Plachutta: This man is not only famous for, well, Tafelspitz (boiled beef with various side dishes, an integral part of Austrian cuisine) but also author of several cookbooks. I refer to them for all the classic Austrian dishes, like Rindsrouladen, Schweinebraten and so forth. But leafing through the book I found this interesting type of ' Pumpkin Curry' which may even be paired with Tafelspitz, if you dare, but is a perfect vegetarian main course if you serve it with chestnuts and/or walnuts to polish up the protein balance. If there is one thing missing here, is that my camera does not love it....so sorry about the photo. Okay, here is the recipe:

1 onion, peeled and chopped into little squares
3 pieces of garlic, peeled and chopped
800 g pumpkin (peeled, shredded)
3 apples, peeld and chopped into little pieces
100 g dried prunes, chopped into halves
150 g peeled tomatoes
100 ml olive oil
100 g walnuts
2 tablespoons of honey
250 ml apple juice
salt, pepper, curry powder
fresh ginger (peeled and chopped into tiny pieces)

Heat oil in a large pan or casserole and roast onions lightly. Add the garlic and stirr, then add  pumpkin, prunes, nuts and honey.
Add some curry powder and apple juice, cook pumpkin until tender. Then add the tomatoes and ginger and season to taste with salt and pepper, tomatoes and ginger.

Mahlzeit!



Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Rice Rice Baby - 5 Elements Coconut Rice w/ Cardamon

For a long time I thought rice is just too boring to cook with. It turned out that I simply never had tasted really good rice before I found this recipe in a five elements cookbook by Barbara Temelie http://www.barbaratemelie.de/Bucher.html, which has lots of interesting food pairings if you are into traditional chinese medicine (and cooking, which is more or less the same in TCM).
The trick is that Basmati rice is cooked with cardamon and ginger, and then further aromatized in a pan with shredded coconut, raisins and nuts. For all you rice-lovers, enjoy! and the anti-rice folks: just give it this one try, you may change your mind....
This rice goes extremly well with any oriental vegetarian dish, and with another recipe I posted recently: Pumkin curry a la Plachutta /blogger.g?blogID=544044521224737309#editor/target=post;postID=4749492252549865921