Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Sweet Potato Tart

To make up for my blogging absence, here is a wonderful recipe for a Sweet Potato Tart that I taught in December's Holiday Sides class. Obviously, my promise from the last post is going to be delayed (I promise not to make promises anymore). I do still have a special Parsnip blog in the works with my new favorite recipe that I will post after my Winter Root Vegetables class is complete. For now, try this tasty gluten-free and dairy-free dessert.



Sweet Potato Tart

Serves: 6-8
Preparation time:

Ingredients
1 teaspoon coconut oil 
3 sweet potatoes, roasted
6 medjool dates, pitted
1 teaspoon salt
½ cup honey
¼ sweet rice flour
¼ cup potato starch
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¾ teaspoon nutmeg
½ teaspoon cardamom

Crust:
2 cups almonds
10 medjool dates, pitted

Preparation

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease an 8-inch pie or cake pan with coconut oil or vegan butter. 

Puree the roasted sweet potatoes with the skins on (if they are organic). Once it is creamy add the dates and puree again. Transfer to a large mixing bowl and combine with the salt, honey, rice flour, potato starch, cinnamon, nutmeg and cardamom.

Clean out the food processor and pulse the almonds and dates for the crust until uniformly chopped, but not powdery. Then place in the pie pan or cake dish and press down to flatten. Then pour the sweet potato filling on top and place in the oven.

Bake for 20-25 minutes. It is done when you touch the top and it none of the filling sticks to your fingers. Glaze with the recipe below and then put in the refrigerator to chill before serving. The crust on this tart will likely crumble. Use the crust crumbs left in the pie dish to garnish the top of the tart when serving. Coconut whip cream is also a great addition!


Recipe adapted from Allyson Kramer’s Sweet Potato Tart with Maple Icing on allysonkramer.com


Until next time. Eat it all up, 

D


Wednesday, December 18, 2013

January Classes

I know. I know. I epically fail at keeping this blog up to date. Life is busy to say the least. Plus, all these wonderful vegetables in season have kept me in the kitchen and away from the computer. For example, my current obsession is with parsnips, of which I want to devote a page to their awesomeness soon. No. I promise to devote a page to there awesomeness. By the end of the week. I promise.

For now, here are the flyers for upcoming January classes.



As promised, I will be back soon to tell you all about parsnips. Until then...

Eat it all up,

D

Thursday, October 17, 2013

The Forbidden Rice





Forbidden black rice, or purple rice, is a black short grain variety that turns a beautiful deep purple color when cooked (and is not to be confused with wild rice which is actually a seed, not a grain). As with other short grains, black rice has higher starch contents than long grains, becoming chewy and sticky when cooked. Its coloring is due to the presence of anthocyanin, an antioxidant also found in blueberries and blackberries. However, studies have shown that the content of this antioxidant is higher in black rice than in berries and packs the added bonus of additional fiber and other health promoting antioxidants (to learn more click here). Yep. That means you can get your antioxidant fix from black rice with a few extra perks when your beloved blueberries are out of season.

Black rice is wildly nutritious (a superfood really), so why has forbidden become a word associated with this particular grain? Any recipe, blog or article about black rice on the web will inform you that once upon a timed during the Ming Dynasty in China, only the Emperors were allowed to eat it; leaving black rice forbidden to the public. Lotus Foods has actually trademarked the name Forbidden Rice, so when shopping for black rice it may not say “forbidden” unless it comes from them, and may be labeled as black or purple rice. I do know that PCC Natural Markets in Seattle carry the 100% certified organic Lotus brand of Forbidden Rice in their bulk section. Of note, Lotus Foods carries both organic and non-organic Forbidden Rice (both are gluten-free and non-GMO though, but if organic is important to you, be sure to read the label before purchasing).

Now that you are excited to make some black rice at home, what shall you do with it? This is a great time of year to experiment, as its mildly nutty flavor is wonderful in soups, warm salads, stir-fried with veggies, or as a hot cereal. I will give you the basics on how to cook the rice and then you I encourage you to get creative with it. To spur you onward in your own black rice adventure, here are a few ideas: 
  • sesame seeds and a toasted sesame oil based dressing for a warm salad
  • coconut milk, honey, pecans and fruit for a breakfast porridge
  • paired with a baked white fish or shrimp and fresh greens
  • ginger tofu and stir-fried bok choy 
I hope that gets the wheels turning for you! There are endless ways you can introduce black rice into your weekly meals. 

So, let us get the details of cooking it down. To preface the following recipe I want you to know that many other recipes will tell you 1-cup rice to 2-cups of water. This is standard for most rice and grains, however, from my own experimentation I find black rice to be chewier and easier to work with if you use 1-cup rice to 1 ¾ cups of water. By easier to work with, I mean it will be slightly less sticky and will not clump together, and will aid you in being able to mix it with other ingredients easily. Trust me, it will still be soft and lovely to bite into.

Forbidden Black Rice

Ingredients:
1 cup black rice
1 ¾ cup water
¼ teaspoon salt

Directions:
1. Place the black rice in a pan and cover with the water. Add the salt, cover the pan with a lid and bring to a boil.

2. Once it boils, reduce to a simmer. Black rice takes approximately 30 minutes to cook, and you can tell when putting a spoon to the bottom of the pan and checking for water or bubbles. If there is any water or water bubbles, it is not done yet.

3. When it is finished, let it stand for 10 minutes, then fluff, then do something amazing with it!

Once again, thanks for reading. I hope to hear from you when you concoct your own black rice dish at home. Let me know what you come up with! 

Until next time. Eat it all up, 

D

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Becoming an Instructor

For more than two years I have been proclaiming and promising to friends and family that I would start a blog. Now that I am out of school and suddenly in the midst of building a career teaching cooking classes, it has become more of a necessity than a way to share recipes with my loved ones.

In all honesty, I have had reservations about blogging (and promoting myself via cyberspace). However, I have been extremely lucky these past few months to have found the perfect outlet for my food passions when I began instructing classes at PCC Cooks in Seattle. Last Fall, I had an internship with them while I was still in school and found quickly that I had a strong desire to join their team as a Chef Instructor upon graduation. Now, a year later, after working with many of their amazing chefs and sitting in on dozens of inspiring classes, I am up there teaching my recipes. And I love it.

As much as I had anticipated being nervous, the only thing I have experienced thus far is extreme excitement and enthusiasm. It is an incredible feeling to guide a group of people through recipes that I have created while gushing about the ingredients and explaining techniques. After my first class I realized how fortunate I was to find a job that I am good at and also love to do. Instantly, I went on the prowl for another space to teach, and a good friend of mine quite randomly found a new gig for me that same week.

This new venue, Culinary Essentials, is a kitchen store that just opened in Ballard, and they have an incredible teaching kitchen. They have kindly let me schedule four inspired-by-the-season classes for November, and if all goes well there will be various classes to come after. Thus, the most crucial reason a blog has become necessary. As opposed to PCC Cooks, I am responsible for promoting my classes at Culinary Essentials and having people sign up directly through me to reserve seats. To put it bluntly, I need to start a following and I need people start signing up for classes to fill the seats.

So, dear readers, please spread the word and follow me here on my blog and my facebook page. Mirinette will be another outlet for me to share recipes, food news, and class updates. For starters, here is the flyer for November classes:




Thanks for reading! Recipes and other food news to come. Until next time. Eat it all up,

D