Slow Cooker French Onion Soup

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Onions in the Slow Cooker

Onions in the Slow Cooker

I love French Onion Soup, but it’s rarely vegetarian so I have to make my own. This is by far the easiest and best tasting recipe I have found. The slow cooker is my favorite way to develop complex flavors just by throwing stuff in a pot and cooking for a long time.  This recipe is from one of favorite cookbooks, Fresh from the Vegetarian Slow Cooker by Robin Robertson.

Oh, and don’t forget to use your Onion Goggles!

French Onion Soup with Cheesy Bruschetta

My Tweaks: I usually only put 1/8 cup olive oil in the bottom of the cooker to reduce the fat. I often use yellow onions and add a little bit of sugar instead of sweet onion, just because yellow onions are cheaper and I have them on hand in larger quantities. Instead of vegetable stock, I use Edward & Sons Not-Beef bullion because FO soup is usually made with beef stock. I use daiya vegan cheese and gluten free bread for the Cheesy Bruschetta and I float them on top of the soup.

French Onion Soup

French Onion Soup


Banana Cupcakes with Peanut Butter Penuche Frosting

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Banana Cupcakes with Peanut Butter Penuche Frosting

Banana Cupcakes with Peanut Butter Penuche Frosting

I had a bunch of small organic bananas that turned brown quickly, so I went on the hunt for a banana bread recipe and found two good recipes, one for banana bread and one for cupcakes with peanut butter frosting. I ended up combining these recipes because I didn’t have the right GF cake mix to make the second one. These are really good!

Here are the two recipes:

Best-Ever Banana Bread

Banana Cupcakes with Peanut Butter Penuche Frosting

My Tweaks:  I stopped at the “regular” grocery store and they only had the Betty Crocker GF cake mix, not the Bob’s Red Mill, so I used the Banana Bread recipe, but added the spices from the cupcake recipe and also added a snack size unsweetened natural applesauce for more moisture and a small dash of almond extract. I baked the cupcakes according to the directions of the second recipe and made the peanut butter penuche frosting (1/2 of the recipe) to put on some of the cupcakes. (Honestly, they were so good that they didn’t need the PB frosting, but it was extra-decadent with frosting.)


Laoo Dahl (Red Lentils with Zucchini)

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Red Lentils with Zucchini

Red Lentils with Zucchini

I get a box of organic produce delivered to my house every 2 weeks. In the last delivery there were three beautiful zucchini. Instead of turning to the internet, I turned to one of my favorite cookbooks, Extending the Table. This recipe is a new favorite! I loved the earthiness of the red lentils combined with the texture and firm freshness of the zucchini.

Laoo Dahl (Red Lentils with Zucchini)

My Tweaks: I used coconut oil and added some garlic paste and ginger paste, just because those are common flavor profiles for Indian food. I didn’t have a hot pepper, so I used aleppo pepper. I served it over brown rice couscous.


Onion Goggles

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Onion Goggles

Onion Goggles

I am extremely sensitive to onion fumes, so I don’t know why it took me so long to put these on my wish list. If you become a sniveling, weepy mess every time you have to chop onions, head over to Amazon to get yourself a pair right now. They really work and you won’t be sorry! My only problem with them is that they are so comfortable, I often put them on to chop the onions and forget that I am wearing them and I’ve been known to have them on for an hour or more before I realize it!


Serbian Potato Salad

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Serbian Potato Salad

Serbian Potato Salad

My mom was invited to a Serbian Christmas party last week, so she asked me to look up some Serbian recipes for her. Serbian Christmas was on January 7th. One of the recipes I found was for a Serbian Potato Salad and I decided to try it. I do prefer an oil/vinegar potato salad to a mayo one, and this one seemed easy and I had almost all of the ingredients on hand. It is delicious, highly recommended!

Serbian Potato Salad

My tweaks: I used champagne vinegar instead of white vinegar and reduced the oil to a little more than 1/4 cup, but not a full 1/2 cup. I only had fresh red bell pepper, so I used that and added smoked paprika for “roasted” flavor. I used sweet onions, didn’t peel the potatoes, and I sprinkled with a little bit of kalonji (onion seeds).


Easy Cake Mix Cookies

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Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cake Cookies

Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cake Cookies

Every year there’s a cookie walk bake sale fundraiser for the animal shelter where I volunteer. This year, I wanted to make something gluten-free and found this recipe online. I’ve made them many times in the past few months and everyone (even “gluten-eaters”) thinks they are great. The cookies are very easy and they always come out perfect. They don’t last long in our house!

Lynn’s Easy Cake Mix Cookies

My Tweaks:  I use melted Earth Balance instead of the oil and Enjoy Life Mini Chips. I’ve made several versions and they have all been good: Vanilla Cake Mix with Chocolate Chips, Vanilla Cake Mix with Raisins and Cinnamon, Chocolate Cake Mix with Chocolate Chips.

Vanilla Chocolate Chip Cookies

Vanilla Chocolate Chip Cookies

 


Grilled Shishito Peppers

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Grilled Shishitos

Grilled Shishitos

I became obsessed with Shishito peppers last Summer when I grew them in my garden. I had never heard of them before, but when I was buying plants at the farmer’s market I saw Shishito plants and bought them because they were something new. As they started producing these adorable little green peppers, I looked online for information about how to prepare them. They are a Japanese variety and are often served grilled or pan-fried at Izakaya bars. About one in 10 is hot and spicy, so it’s a fun game of pepper roulette!

You might be able to find Shishito peppers at Japanese grocery stores, or look for Twist Peppers at Korean grocery stores. (Twist are a variety of Shishito). Now that it is Winter and my garden is gone, I’ve had better luck finding them at the Korean stores.

Here’s the super simple recipe: Grilled Shishito Peppers Recipe

My Tweaks:  I use a hot frying pan with a little oil instead of the grill and toss the peppers every few minutes until they blister and start to char. At the end I sprinkle with togarashi, sea salt and some additional toasted black sesame seeds.

Shishito Pepper Plant in my garden

Shishito Pepper Plant in my garden


Ddeokbokki

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Ddeokbokki

Ddeokbokki

Duck What?

Ddeokbokki  (pronounced duck – bOHki) is a sweet, spicy, chewy comfort food from Korea. I first encountered it while watching the Korean Tasty Road restaurant show on the mnet channel. It sounded so interesting that I started searching for recipes and found a simple on one mykoreankitchen.com.

If you have a good Korean grocery in your area (along the lines of H-Mart or Assi Plaza, or even a small neighborhood market), look for fresh Ddeok rice cakes. If you can’t find fresh, they will probably have them in the frozen section. Also look for the gochujang sauce (in a little square tub).

Here’s the recipe: Stir Fried Rice Cake with Gochujang Sauce (Ddeokbokki in Korean)

My Tweaks:  I left out the fish cake and added peeled eggplant at the beginning of cooking (with the onion). I also added some julienned carrots towards the end so they got a little cooked, but just enough to stay crunchy. I sprinkled with toasted black sesame seeds before serving.

Delicious!

-m


Grandmom’s Lentil Soup Recipe

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Grandmom's Lentil Soup

Grandmom’s Lentil Soup

According to my late Grandmom, it is Italian tradition to make lentil soup on New Year’s Day for good fortune. The lentils represent little coins. Here’s her recipe.

Grandmom’s Lentil Soup

2 cups (one pkg.) Jack Rabbit or Goya Lentils
2 small whole onions, peeled
2 cloves garlic, smashed
2 carrots, chopped fine
2 ribs celery and leaves from inner ribs, chopped fine
8-ounce can Hunt’s tomato sauce
1 T. olive oil
1 bay leaf
3-5 qts. cold water  (depending on how soupy you like your soup)
8 oz small pasta – pastina, tubetini, or small elbows – cooked al dente before adding to the soup
salt to taste (after cooking)

Pick over lentils, wash and drain. Place in large soup pot with all of the above ingredients. Simmer until lentils are tender (one hour). When finished, add pasta, then salt to taste.

It’s a very simple soup, but very comforting.

My Tweaks:
To make this gluten-free, I use rice pasta instead of the regular pasta. I also like to DOUBLE the amount of carrots, celery, garlic and onion. I use 3 qts of water because I like a thicker soup. I also added some organic tuscan kale (leafy part – ribs discarded) in the last 10 minutes of cooking time. The kale adds the health benefits of dark, leafy greens. Another option would be to add escarole right at the end.  I find this needs lots of salt because it is made mostly with water, not broth or stock. I salt when serving or reheating. I could’ve used the pressure cooker for this, but I decided to cook it on the stovetop, the way my Grandmom always did.

Happy New Year!

-m