meals recipes

Soy-sesame roasted Brussel sprouts, mushroom brown rice with leek, and apple-plum compote with ginger

All of that sounds super fancy, doesn’t it? That was kind of the point.

As I’ve reported in the past, I enjoy grocery shopping. While it’s not too far away, going to H Mart is still always a treat. There are so many amazingly beautiful and interesting vegetables that I don’t have any clue what to do with but buy anyway (yu choy! baby radishes!).

Everyone’s been going on and on about baby Brussels sprouts lately. I don’t know how they became the cool vegetable, but I knew I wanted to try them. I had a vague idea of what I wanted to do and it developed as I wandered around H Mart. I needed more sesame oil and I thought the nuttiness would be a good compliment to the earthy flavor of the sprouts. Soy sauce was an obvious choice, as was garlic, and ginger was on sale. I knew I needed something acidic, so I grabbed oranges.

But one can’t make a meal of Brussels sprouts alone (well, OK, you can, but …) so I needed a hearty grain. Quinoa (which, fine, I know is not actually a grain) didn’t seem quite right, so I went pretty basic: brown rice. I picked up mushrooms (not at H Mart, sadly, which probably would’ve been smarter) and figured those, the leek I’d picked up and a bit of garlic would be just perfect.

To round out the meal, I knew I wanted something a little sweet and fruity. Apples are always my go-to for this, and on a whim, I grabbed a few plums. I knew both things would be wonderful with a bit of ginger.

Apple-plum compote with ginger

  • A combination of apples and plums, peeled cored and coarsely chopped to make 3 cups of fruit (I used four apples and three plums — I’d say it was about a 2-1 ratio of apple to plum, but I think it’s pretty flexible)
  • 1 tablespoon grated fresh ginger
  • 1 to 1 1/2 cups water
  • 1-2 teaspoons agave syrup or maple syrup (or a bit of sugar — my goal here wasn’t to make this too sweet but just amplify the sweetness already there)
  • Salt to taste

Everything goes into a saucepan. Let this simmer over medium heat, stirring occasionally until the fruit is softened and the water has been reduced. Feel free to break up some of the fruit chunks as you go, but it’s still supposed to have some substance. You’ll know when it’s done, but it will probably be about 20 minutes. I would start this first and just set it aside when it’s done. It will cool to the right temperature by the time everything else is done.

Mushroom brown rice with leek and garlic

  • 1 leek, finely chopped
  • 2-3 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
  • 8 ounces of mushrooms, chopped (I used crimini, but whatever mushrooms you like)
  • 2 1/2 cups vegetable stock/water
  • 1 cup brown rice
  • Salt if needed (if you’re using stock, you may not need salt)
  • 1 tablespoon oil — olive or vegetable

Saute the leek and garlic until softened and translucent. Add the mushrooms (and a bit more oil if necessary) and cook while stirring for about 5 minutes or until the mushrooms have softened. Add the stock/water (taste for seasoning) and bring to a boil. Add the rice and reduce to a simmer and cover. Cook for about 40-45 minutes or until done (By the way, basically, after you’re done with the vegetables, you’re just following the directions on your package of rice).

Soy-sesame roasted Brussels sprouts

Preheat oven to 450 degrees (F)

  • 1 pound baby Brussel sprouts, cut into uniform pieces (generally halved, but if you have bigger ones, possibly quartered)

Dressing:

  • 2/3 cup soy sauce
  • 1/3 cup orange juice (preferably freshly squeezed)
  • 1 teaspoon orange zest
  • 2 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1 tablespoon minced ginger
  • 1/2 teaspoon agave/maple syrup
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil

Mix all the ingredients together in a large bowl. Set aside while you prep your Brussels sprouts.

Stir your Brussels sprouts in with the dressing and let them absorb some of it for a bit — you’re not necessarily going to let them soak in the dressing for too long of a time, but toss them in it for a couple of minutes.

Spread your sprouts onto a baking sheet and roast in the oven for 20-25 minutes, turning halfway through. Once you take them out, transfer to a bowl and pour over some of the leftover dressing (which you will have since I estimated too much).

The rice should be done about the same time your sprouts are, unless you’re much faster at prepping than I am. Your compote is done, though, and is probably waiting for you. Pile everything onto a plate and enjoy with a nice white wine or a beer (the seasonal bocks that are out right now are a good choice). Also post the photo of your meal to Facebook to make all your friends and family jealous.

beer

The Bruery: 4 Calling Birds

Name: 4 Calling Birds
Brewery: The Bruery
Style: Belgian strong dark ale
ABV: 11%
Place purchased/consumed: Arrowine
Bottle or tap: Bottle
Drink again? It’s hard to say, but since it was only brewed once, it doesn’t really matter.

The Bruery definitely brews some interesting and elegant beers that also have a sense of fun. They’re a commitment — they’re generally on the pricier side and all come in the standard wine-bottle size (they are sometimes available on draft, though). While none of The Bruery’s beers are my favorite, I am happy to try all of them.

Ambitiously, they are brewing a beer every year to correspond to each of the verses of “The Twelve Days of Christmas.” This is, obviously, the fourth one.

Yes, I know it’s no longer the holidays but it’s still winter (even if the weather outside seems to disagree) and so the idea of a dark, spicy beer sounded like what I wanted.

It’s definitely all those things — it’s fairly high in alcohol but that compliments the the warm spices (the blurb mentions “gingerbread” and there’s definitely hints of nutmeg, cinnamon and ginger here). It’s a sipping beer and actually tastes better as it warms up a bit.

Still, though, I’m not in love with it. It’s a beautifully crafted beer and I don’t regret buying it. Still, it’s not doing as much for me as I would’ve liked.

But I will still continue to drink every Bruery beer I come across.

meals

Holiday dinner 2011

This year, I kept it fairly simple because I am lazy. It still turned out to be a good meal, though.

My mom made a vegan cheese log as the appetizer. It was made of various fake cheese products and, therefore, mostly fat, but it was mighty delicious.

To make up for that, my first course was a cold cucumber-mango soup.  It was more or less based on this recipe, but when the time came to make it, I mostly made it up. It was one English cucumber, a bag of frozen mangoes, about a fourth of an onion, water, salt and pepper. Everything went into the blender and got pureed. It was fruity but not too sweet. Since these ingredients can be found pretty easily year round (thank you, Trader Joe’s for the mangoes!), I think I’ll make it again for a nice bit of freshness in the winter.

The main course was a roasted vegetable lasagna. I used my ever-so-tasty tofu ricotta and the vegetables were a mix of zucchini, red pepper, onion and I think something else I can’t remember right now. The sauce was just a basic store-bought red sauce (once again, thank you, Trader Joe’s). It was one of the better lasagnas I’ve made but at this point, I have the process down pretty well.

We drank wine with this dinner since we’d been drinking so much beer this week. It was actually a nice change.

It was fancy enough to be festive but still relatively easy. As much as I enjoy cooking, I was glad to not be in the kitchen all day for this one.

general

Rumnog Pecan Cookies

Last year, I was looking for a cookie to make to give as a gifts and I came across the Rumnog Pecan Cookie recipe in my beloved Veganomicon and they seemed like a perfect fit — holiday flavors with just enough fancy touches to be special. Also, it gave me an excuse to buy a bottle of dark rum.

Sadly, though, since they were made for gifts, I didn’t get to eat too many of them myself. This year, I decided I was going to remedy that.

Also, I really wanted to buy another bottle of Kraken rum.  I mean, look at how cool it looks? Now, yes, I do think it’s mighty tasty, but come on, it’s awesome.  (And they volunteer that Kraken is “gluten-free and vegan” right on the website, which I appreciate.

So I made my cookies and the frosting. And I did, perhaps, put a bit more rum in the frosting than was called for (because why not?).

I didn’t sample one when they came out the oven. I did, however, accidentally (no, really, it was an accident) drop one in the frosting so I figured, hey, now is as good of a time as any to try one.

And I definitely approved. These cookies are amazingly good.

I know there’s three in the photo, but I think you’d be crazy to eat three of these at once. They are a powerful cookie (and not just because I put all that rum in the frosting) — a little chewy, and incredibly rich and flavorful with just the right balance of sweetness and spices.

I’ve only had two so far, though, honestly, and while I’m happy that they’re all mine (other than the three I gave to a friend — really, three is enough for anyone), I’m going to have to take my time getting through them.

But hey, that’s not really a problem, now is it? Also, I have the rest of that bottle of Kraken to enjoy in various holiday-related beverages.

Also, while we’re talking about putting (possibly ill-advised amounts of ) alcohol into food, I am totally excited to see there’s a cookbook called The Tipsy Vegan. I almost don’t care if this cookbook is good (although the recipes I’ve seen from it sound amazing and inventive). It just charms me that it exists in the first place.

general

The saddest Thanksgiving ever

OK, that’s a joke. It really wasn’t that sad. But my family was too far away to travel to and all my friends were out of town or otherwise occupied with family. My roommate went to his family’s (he did kindly invite me along, but I decline), so it was just me all by myself.

Initially, I felt ambitious and thought “I will make this Pumpkin Cheesecake with Pecan Crunch!” and then I thought better of it (it’s still something I will love to make some day).

But I thought, hm, ginger snap crumb crust … I could still totally make a pumpkin pie.

So that’s what I did:

It wasn’t a complete failure, you know, especially since I basically read a few recipes and made it up as I went along.

I used about a half pound of silken tofu, which I don’t think really did much of anything to help the pie set up. Some recipes also called for cornstarch, which I do think would’ve helped (and I may try that next year). But it still tastes pretty good, even if it doesn’t necessarily hold together too well. And anyway, who am I trying to impress?

I also made a big dish of stuffing. I used Pepperidge Farm’s mix, which is full of things I usually don’t eat (like high fructose corn syrup) but I was feeling lazy and didn’t want to go looking all over the universe for a vegan stuffing mix. (And I figured it was a holiday …) No photo of that, but I did throw in about 3/4 of a cup of dried cranberries since I had them around. And I perhaps just left my fork in the dish for a while and would just wander by and take bites of it every so often. Did I mention no one else is here?

It was fun and it was silly.

But now it’s time to start thinking about making cookies (Rumnog Pecan Cookies from Veganomicon! And I will actually save some for myself this year!) and what I’ll make for my family as my present to them.

restaurant

Vegan Brunch at Smoke and Barrel

Vegan Breakfast Tacos at Smoke and Barrel

Asylum used to be the go-to place when you wanted the least healthy vegan food in existence. It was all fried and fatty fake cheeses and more. And also pretty good. Except you didn’t need to eat for the rest of the day.

It wasn’t a place you wanted to eat all the time but it was fun.

Asylum has transformed into the more upscale Smoke and Barrel and while the vegan brunch options are still there and definitely still a draw, they’ve likewise been revamped and transformed.

Still basically as unhealthy as ever, though.

I got the vegan breakfast tacos, which had tofu scramble, black beans, vegan cheese and roasted red peppers. Vegan sour cream was served on the side. My side dish was sweet potato home fries.

The tofu scramble remains unchanged from the restaurant”s Asylum days. The roasted red peppers were a nice touch, but I could’ve used a bit more heat (there were hot sauces on the table but I would’ve preferred a salsa). Three tacos were a bit much for me — these were dense.

The sweet potato home fries were excellent, but at the same time, I think you’d have to try to screw them up.

I’m glad that Smoke & Barrel has continued the tradition of the vegan brunch and its dinner menu has a few notable options — I’d definitely love to try the BBQ Smoked Tofu sandwich.  Plus, with the extensive and thoughtful beer menu, I’m there.

beer

Bell’s Porter

I will write about beer, but since I didn’t write about VegFest so here’s a summary: I went, I ate food and it was fun. It was surprisingly and delightfully crowded. It definitely skewed more toward the “here’s information about being vegetarian/vegan” than “here are some awesome products and such.” Information is definitely cool and important and while I wouldn’t say I know everything there is about this subject, I know enough and I know why I’m doing this. I don’t need more convincing. I like new foods and products, though.

Tiny complaints. I mean, Vegan Treats was there and my only regret is that I couldn’t afford to buy one of everything and that my stomach wasn’t bigger.

Anyway, let’s move on to beer!

Date: 9/30/11
Name: Porter
Brewery: Bell’s Brewery
Style: Porter
ABV: 5.6%
Place purchased/consumed: Whole Foods
Bottle or tap: Bottle
Drink again? Of course.

It’s slowly becoming fall (this weekend, it’s supposed to be chilly — as in highs in the lower 60s. And I’m just like “Bring it on!”) which means it’s time to start drinking a bunch of pumpkin beer and also wonder why I’m drinking so much pumpkin beer. (I do like pumpkin beers but more I like tracking the variations and how much nutmeg is in one as compared to another).

But fall also means it’s time to start drinking darker beers — it’s no longer time for fruity and refreshing wheat beers. It’s time for warm malts and heavier flavors.

Some days, though, stouts are too much. They’re just too thick and rich and too high in alcohol.

So porters are perfect for this.

I admire Bell’s Brewery‘s simplicity here. This is simply called “Porter.” It’s clearly a porter. That’s all it needs to be. The smoky, malty sweetness but the relatively low alcohol content (although most porters fall in this range) gives it a smooth finish. This is a beer that easy to drink and enjoy as one dreams of fall days.

general

DC is the vegetarian capital

Or so says this survey. Well, what it really says is that more people in DC don’t eat meat than any other city in this survey.

The DC metro area is definitely amazingly friendly for vegetarians. We may not have a ton of purely vegetarian/vegan restaurants, but we do have an amazing amount of vegetarian/vegan-friendly restaurants. I almost think that’s more important. There’s an incredible abundance of pizza places offering up vegan cheese now (even a late-night big slice place, which is ridiculous) and a good number of bars serve up vegan eats without question (a legacy leftover from DC’s punk days).

I’ve never had trouble eating in restaurants here. Yeah, it does take a little more forethought, but it’s super-easy to go without meat here. It’s barely even a thing you need to think about.

Some of it, I know, is the awesome work groups like Compassion Over Killing does in the area. They work with restaurants to develop vegetarian and vegan dishes. The goal isn’t to make restaurants entirely vegetarian — but just to encourage them to expand their offerings a bit more.

I will be at DC VegFest next weekend. You should come too!

beer

Ommegang Aphrodite

Date: 9/14/11
Style: Fruit/Belgian-y
ABV: 8.9%
Place purchased/consumed: Galaxy Hut
Bottle or tap: Tap
Drink again? YES

Recently, much has been discussed about Beer for Women! The nadir (or zenith, I suppose, depending on your perspective), is Chick Beer, a 4.2% beer that comes in a pink and black bottle. It’s apparently lightly carbonated since that’s what ladies like. Or something. I actually can’t spend too much time hating Chick because I don’t have that sort of energy. Maybe it’s filling a certain gap in the market. I have no idea, and I really don’t care to.

Which brings me Ommegang‘s Aphrodite. It’s a bright, beautifully ruby-colored beer named after the Greek goddess of love. And to me, this is how you do a beer for women.

It’s definitely fruity — there is  plenty of tart raspberry and playful pear — but it’s not an overly sweet fruit beer. The dominant yeast rounds out the sizable 8.9% alcohol content (and just as a warning — this beer absolutely does not go down like a beer that high in alcohol). It’s more complex than it seems like it should be on first glance or taste — the fruitiness gives way to a spicy bite, and the gentle bubbles (I don’t know — maybe Chick is onto something there) provides a pleasant mouthfeel. It’s a beer I wanted to keep drinking because I couldn’t quite figure it out. It was delightful and surprising.

But the photo — yes, that was three women drinking this gladly (and we all decided we needed to have it again). The rest of you can keep beers like Chick. We’re going to stick with this.

meals

Apple-sweet potato mash, steamed kale and radishes

I wish this had been a better photo but I was hungry.

I haven’t been able to make a real meal for myself in a while.

That’s not to say I’m not eating — I am. But my meals have mostly consisted of opening jars and cans and possibly boiling water for some pasta. I’ve been busy and haven’t felt too inspired.

Today was one of those days where it was trying really hard to be fall. It was still warm, but there was a crispness in the air and a certain color to the sky that said that fall is nearly here. And I can’t wait. I love fall. You get to wear cute jackets and boots and it’s time to go into the kitchen again.

So perhaps due to a combination of my uninspired meals of food from cans and jars and the whisper of fall, I wanted some tasty, powerful food.

I knew I wanted kale (I’ve been known to eat plates of steamed kale — nothing more — for dinner, and it’s great) and … well, I went to the store looking for butternut or delicata squash, but the butternut squash the store had didn’t excite me (maybe we’re still a bit early?) so I settled on sweet potatoes instead.

(The store called them “yams” but they were sweet potatoes.)

The apple-sweet potato mash came from Appetite for Reduction (the only cookbook I use anymore apparently), and I basically followed it (I added in about a tablespoon of Earth Balance because I did and I needed quite a bit more salt than she called for). For some strange reason, I don’t have a potato masher, so mine came out a little more chunky than smooth, but I actually liked that. I liked getting a chunk of apple then a chunk of sweet potato.

The kale I just washed and steamed. And the radishes were just because they’re pretty. But I do think they added a good contrasting coolness and crunch to the meal.

It was exactly what I wanted. It came together pretty quickly and I think I’ll be eating a version of this all fall.