Friday, December 25, 2009

Heirloom beans and rice

I just discovered heirloom beans, and having tried a few varieties, will never go back to ordinary store dried beans or canned ones.  What a difference.  If you are trying to incorporate more beans into your diet, you owe it to your taste buds to check out http://ranchogordo.com.  These beans are guaranteed to be 2 years old or younger.  With soaking and a pressure cooker, these beans are almost instant food.


1 Cup (dry) brown rice
3/4 cup Rio Zape Beans - soaked for at least 4 hours (any variety of heirloom beans will do, this is what I used today)
2 onions, diced
4-6 carrots, peeled and thinly sliced
2 parsnips, peeled and thinly sliced
pinch of salt

I made short grain brown rice in my rice cooker.  (very easy, add rice & water, and press a few buttons, within 2 hours you have perfectly cooked rice that didn't need any attention).

Water saute 2 diced onions till translucent , then add a package of sliced baby bella mushrooms and some garlic.  sautee some more, then add carrots and parsnips.   Let it breathe for a minute or two, then add in the soaked beans, and enough water to cover everything.  Cover and lock the pressure cooker, and bring to high pressure.  Cook for 9 minutes at high pressure and use natural release.  When almost ready to serve, remove lid and bring to a boil.  Add a pinch of salt and the cooked rice.  Boil for about 5-10 minutes, or till beans/rice is the consistency you want.  Serve in bowls with spoons.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Eggplant Salsa over Baked Potatoes

This was from the other night, I'm behind in my posting.

If you don't alreadyown the Big and Healthy Cookbook from the Wellness Forum, you'll want to call them and get a copy. (614-841-7700).  It's full of lots of healthy vegan recipes.

I roasted 2 Italian eggplants (small), and separately sauted (in water), chopped onion, minced garlic,  mushrooms and Trader Joe's fire roasted onions and peppers.  (the local pepper crop was not good this season, too much rain.  Every pepper I bought had mold on the inside - yuck!  The TJ's frozen fire roasted peppers, on the other hand were great!).  I ran this mixture plus the eggplant thru the food processor, for a coarse chop.  I then put it all back in the saucepan and added a can of fire roasted crushed tomatoes and some nutritional yeast and let is simmer.  This was fabulous over baked potatoes.

For lunch the next day, it was equally yummy  served cold on toasted whole wheat pita with hummus.  In fact, there are enough leftovers for lunch for a few days.  Yum!!

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Vegan Chili

I found this recipe http://vegweb.com/index.php?topic=16131.0, while searching for seitan chili recipe. I omitted the oil, and used a full can of red beans and one of pinto beans, instead of 1/2 of pinto and 1/2 can of black beans.  D is not a fan of black beans, and I don't like opening 2 cans that will leave me with leftovers, though I'm sure I could put them to good use later in the week.  Otherwise, we went with the recipe as written.  I served the chili over red rice, and it was very good.  As usual, I didn't cook with salt/pepper, and we found it didn't need any, though your mileage may vary.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Mushroom Barley Soup

I used a recipe in Lorna Sass' Great Vegetarian Cooking Under Pressure as a guide.  Her book is extremely useful when you are converting recipes to use with a pressure cooker.

As usual, I ditched the oil, and water sauted several small diced onions.  I added in some minced garlic while the onions were browning.  I added 4 diced carrots, 1 cup of barley, 1 bag of sliced crimini mushrooms from Trader Joes and 6 cups of vegetable stock (which in my kitchen is 6 cups of water and 6 tablespoons of the Wellness Forum's "Not Chicken Broth" powder) and  some dried dill.  Cook on high pressure for 18 minutes and soup will be ready.  I used double the barley of the original recipe, but didn't double the liquids, since we like a heartier soup.  I don't add salt/pepper when I'm cooking, you'll likely want these when you serve the soup.