Thursday, February 17, 2011

Kale Wisdom from the Guys



Joe's beautiful kale leaves in a snowy garden patch.

Submitted by Kat Braun
River House WV

This blog is dedicated to my husband and some of my favorite men-friends. Read on and you’ll see why!

About Kale
When I was a little girl I ate spinach and cabbage, potatoes and corn, broccoli, peas and carrots. I’d even venture an occasional brussels sprout or lima bean as long as they were small and tender.  But kale? Kale was beyond me. I’m so glad my Dad grew it and my Mom made me taste everything at every meal, so I eventually developed a taste for it. Now I love it! If you don’t care for it, keep trying. Research it anywhere—the list of benefits from kale is too long to print here!

Kale is not only supremely nutritious, it’s also -  
  • Easy to grow and hardy in cold weather!  My husband, Joe, grows it almost year round outside, and his newest baby plants are starting to show!
  • Beautiful in your garden!  There are many colorful varieties--Uncle Dave at Blue Mountain Farm included Russian Red kale in our CSA bags last week!
  • Versatile:  Steam it, stir fry, chop it up and add its color and vital nutrients to virtually any dish—as in my examples below.

These are two fabulous recipes sent to me recently by friends - guys who, like my husband, grow, cook and value REAL FOOD!

Enjoy!!!

Ray’s Coconut Lentil Soup
from Ray Goodman

Ray makes this yummy soup from organic, wheat free, gluten free ingredients.

The recipe in a nutshell: 
  1. Pre-soak 1 cup of lentils with 2 tablespoons of barley flakes in about 4.
  2. Dump the presoak water from the lentils. Add fresh water to the lentils (about 4 cups). Bring to boil and then lower heat and simmer for ½ hour.
  3. Add chopped veggies of your choice —usually beta-carotenes: Carrots, butternut squash, jewel sweet-potato, some parsley flakes, chopped up kale.
  4. Season with kelp flakes, turmeric, a pinch of cayenne, toasted sesame oil, sea or celtic salt.
  5. Throw in a handful of rice or Tinkyada noodles. (Tinkyada noodles are organic, wheat free, gluten free rice pasta.)
  6. During the last 15 minutes of simmering, add ½ can of coconut milk.
This next recipe was forwarded to me by Dave Elliot (Uncle Dave) of of Blue Mountain Farm in Hedgesville, West Virginia. Dave is a hardworking, socially and nutritionally conscious organic farmer who likes to sit down and read the New York Times Nutrition & Fitness Section after a long day of work. Rock on, Dave!

Andrew Scrivani
for The New York Times

By Martha Rose Shulman

New York Times Online Edition
February 1, 2011


Beans baked very slowly for several hours develop a creamy texture, while the liquid they cook in, which thickens to a syrup, acquires a caramelized flavor. The kale practically melts in this casserole, going from bitter to sweet. I love using lima beans in this dish because they’re so big and their texture is so luxurious.

  • 1 bunch kale, stemmed and washed in two changes of water
  • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 1 carrot, chopped
  • 1 rib celery, chopped
  • 4 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 2/3 cups white beans (3/4 pound) or dried lima beans, picked over and soaked for at least four hours and drained
  • 1 6-ounce can tomato paste, dissolved in 1 cup water
  • 3 cups additional water
  • A bouquet garni consisting of 4 parsley sprigs, 2 thyme sprigs and a bay leaf
  • 1 teaspoon herbes de Provence
  • Salt and a generous amount of freshly ground pepper
  • 1/2 cup bread crumbs


1. Preheat the oven to 225 degrees. Meanwhile, bring a large pot of water to a boil, salt generously and add the kale. Blanch for two minutes, then transfer to a bowl of ice water. Drain, squeeze out water and cut into ribbons. Set aside. (I blanch the kale to extract some of the bitterness, but you can skip this step if you wish).
2. Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil over medium heat in a large ovenproof casserole. Add the onion, carrots and celery. Cook, stirring often, until the onion is tender, about five minutes. Add the garlic and cook, stirring, until fragrant, 30 seconds to a minute. Add the dissolved tomato paste, and bring to a simmer.
3. Add the drained beans, the remaining water, the bouquet garni, herbes de Provence and salt and pepper.. Stir in the kale, bring to a simmer, cover and place in the oven. Bake three hours until the beans are tender and creamy. Taste and adjust salt.
4. Mix together the remaining olive oil and the bread crumbs. Sprinkle the bread crumbs over the beans, and continue to bake another 30 minutes to an hour until the bread crumbs are lightly browned. Remove from the heat and serve; or allow to cool slightly and serve.
Note: Make sure that the beans come to a simmer on top of the stove before placing them in the oven. Do not use old beans, which will not soften no matter how long you simmer them. If the beans do not soften in the oven after a couple of hours, raise the heat to 300 degrees. If you live at a high altitude, raise the oven temperature and let the the beans bake for longer.
Yield: Serves six.
Advance preparation: You can make this recipe through Step 3 and store it in the refrigerator up to four days ahead of serving. Top with the bread crumbs, and reheat in a 350-degree oven for 15 minutes until the beans are bubbling and the bread crumbs lightly browned.
Nutritional information per serving (six servings): 370 calories; 8 grams fat (1 gram saturated fat); 0 milligrams cholesterol; 58 grams carbohydrates; 12 grams dietary fiber; 191 milligrams sodium (does not include salt to taste); 19 grams protein
Martha Rose Shulman is the author of "The Very Best of Recipes for Health."



We Want Your Ideas
If you have recipe suggestions or great ideas about anything at all, please send them to coop.cooking@gmail.com. Be sure to include your name so we can recognize your contribution. Photos are welcome but not necessary.



Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Kat's Musings .... We Can All Make Noodles!

Submitted by Kat Braun

This may sound silly, but in reading Angela’s recent post, it occurs to me how wonderful it is that we can make noodles -- or maybe, what’s wonderful is when we realize that we can -- and then further, to encourage others by letting them know that they, too, can make noodles—or whatever!  Noodles are a great analogy here for what I call “reclaiming the knowledge of our self-sufficient inter-connectedness”.

Nowadays the noodles we know are mass-produced, pre-packaged, bleached, stripped, then re-“enriched”. Like anything else, pre-packaged noodles are nothing compared to homemade!   I’ve made my own wine, cheese, bread, butter, chocolate, jerky and soap…and I have not ever tried noodles…But I will now!

Part of the motivation for this blog was information sharing, as we found ourselves being asked each week what we did with certain CSA veggies.  For example, last week’s mizuna from Uncle Dave at Blue Mountain Farm.  Mizuna, a Japanese leafy green, is zingy--a bit like arugula. We stir fry/steam over any dish…That’s if there is any left over from mixing into salad...Very yummy!

Mizuna is often used in a cultural Japanese type of dining termed “nabemono”.  Akin to American “Family-Style” dining where everyone around the table serves themselves from a common pot, nabemono is believed to deepen the relationships of those who participate together, nourishing themselves from a common source.

As SHARING was one of the principle motivations for this blog, AWARENESS is one of the principles we wish to promote.  By kindly monitoring our selves and slowly adopting progressively better habits, we (humans) focus on the Art of Living.  One of the luxuries of this kind of choice is that, although it’s not easy, time spent cultivating our “self” and our relationships, learning, sharing information, helping one another, growing tolerance and compassion--are all mutually supportive with any chosen personal and professional path.  

So, here’s our challenge, to you and ourselves:  Live artfully with whatever you touch and with the knowledge that you can.  Anyone can create beautiful, expressive artwork in every way--nutritious meals, a cozy home, a natural garden to help feed themselves and learn about nature through nature itself, nurturing relationships, teaching at work and at home, actively supporting positive community or group efforts…in EVERY facet of every life.

Try something you’ve always wanted to do…Do that something you’ve not yet done just because you haven’t done it yet!  We’ve each only got so much time on earth…Make a difference…Make noodles!!!




We Want Your Ideas
If you have recipe suggestions or great ideas, please send them to coop.cooking@gmail.com. Be sure to include your name so we can recognize your contribution. Photos are welcome but not necessary.

Flourless Chocolate Almond Torte

Submitted by Angela Matthews

Flourless Chocolate Almond Torte
The CSA bags have not arrived yet so there is no "fresh, seasonal, regional" recipe for today. However, Mark's birthday was Sunday night and we wanted to bake him a really special chocolate cake to celebrate. So here goes.


A wheat free gluten free birthday party presents a real challenge, especially when trying to find a recipe for a birthday cake. My torte is adapted from a Flourless Chocolate Cake recipe at Wheat-Free.org. This website is extremely useful but it is a European organization so the recipes are in metric measurements. Fortunately, Eat Cook Share has a simple online calculator to help convert grams into cups, teaspoons, etc.


Images will follow the recipe for this post. I want to keep them in order so you can see the actually progression of the torte. This dessert is truly a marvel or chemistry and physics! Watching the process is almost as scrumptious as the torte itself.



Flourless Chocolate Almond Torte (Serves 8 – 10)

Ingredients:

Dark chocolate cut into pieces
2 bars of 60% - 72% cocoa dark chocolate broken into pieces
¾ cup butter, margarine or low fat spread
5 medium eggs
¾ cup sugar, divided in half
3 tablespoons strong coffee, instant or brewed
¾ cup plus 2 tablespoons ground almonds
2 tablespoons dark cocoa powder, unsweetened
1 teaspoon baking powder
melting chocolate, cocoa powder or confectioner’s sugar for top of cake (optional)

Heat oven to 375°


Melt chocolate over low heat
Line a 9" circular spring form cake pan with non-stick baking paper.


Put the chocolate pieces and butter into a saucepan and melt over a gentle heat until completely melted and well combined.


Egg whites beginning to peak
Beat the egg whites until they are stiff, when you can tip the bowl on its side and the beaten egg whites don't move you know that you have beaten it enough. Then add half of the sugar and beat together.


Fold egg yolks into melted chocolate. 
The mixture will start out looking like
marshmallow & chocolate sauce.
Add the other half of the sugar to the egg yolks and beat together until the mix is creamy and thicker.


Add the egg yolk mix and the coffee to the melted chocolate. Gently stir the ingredients together.


Gently fold the beaten egg whites into the mixture, ensuring that the air beaten into the egg whites is not lost.


Mix the ground almonds, cocoa powder and baking powder together thoroughly, then slowly add this mix to the chocolate mix. Make sure that both mixes are well combined, but do not beat the ingredients together.
Torte batter will remain slightly lumpy.


Pour the mixture into the baking pan and bake for 45-50 minutes. To check that the cake is cooked properly insert a skewer into the center of the cake, if it comes out clean then the cake is cooked.


Leave the cake in the baking tin for 30 minutes to cool, then turn out to cool completely on a wire cooling rack.


Before serving, dust with either sieved cocoa powder or icing sugar or drizzle with melting bakers chocolate.


Helpful Tips


Ingredients pre-measured and pre-mixed
by recipe stages.
Read through the entire recipe and stage the ingredients before beginning to make this recipe. Wherever possible, mix dry ingredients before hand in a separate bowl for each step. This will allow you to pay attention to the airy egg mixtures.

Put the bowl you will use for the egg whites, along with the beaters, in the refrigerator for at least an hour before beginning your baking. This will give you a cold bowl to beat the egg whites in, helping the egg whites to peak.


The darker the chocolate or cocoa powder you use, the drier the torte will be. If you use chocolate with more than 72% cocoa then serve the torte with a vanilla cream sauce, ice cream or a pudding to help moisten the cake. We like a pistachio sauce or pistachio pudding with ours.



We Want Your Ideas
If you have recipe suggestions, please send them to coop.cooking@gmail.com. Be sure to include your name so we can recognize your contribution. Photos are welcome but not necessary.