Saturday Sites : Week Twenty

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  1. This list made me homesick for Kauai. Manapua, free avocados and papaya, lau lau, musubi, malasadas, shave ice, saimin!

  2. How about some missed connection ads for you? Okay, not for you, for a-holes!

  3. It’s inevitable that sometime you’ll be cooking and realize you’re missing a key ingredient. This substitution list is one I want to keep on hand for those instances.

  4. Parents at the beginning and end of the school year. I feel this.

  5. This recipe sounds so simple; I want to try it soon!

  6. These paintings are incredible.

  7. I enjoyed reading this list about introverts and found the majority of it relative to my own feelings.

  8. Yes, these ads.

  9. Boozy milkshakes like this one remind me of college drink concoctions. I would probably die trying to drink some of the things I’ve created in my life. This one doesn’t sound so bad though.

  10. Growing up in the culinary melting pot that is Hawaii, Filipino food isn’t foreign to me… Many of these things sound delicious to me.

  11. I love, love, love these homes.

  12. I also really enjoy this color palette!

  13. Honeyed blonde gingerbread?! I am officially perplexed and intrigued by this recipe.

  14. I loved this article. “You Can’t Bounce of the Walls if there are No Walls…”

  15. This video made me smile.

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Meatless Monday: Miso Mushroom Udon with Tempura Vegetables

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When it comes to a good bowl of noodles, vegetarian or not, everything EVERYTHING key is the broth. You cannot make a good bowl of noodle soup without a good stock to base things on. Growing up, I loved noodles. Honestly, at nearly 30 years old, they’re still my favorite comfort food. Instant noodles, slow cooked noodle soups, ramen, saimin, thin noodles with lots of broth, fat noodles with little broth but bold flavors… I am all in.

While I am not vegetarian and do not balk at a broth whose depth of flavor comes from fish stock or slow cooked meat, my husband won’t eat broth that is derived from anything but vegetarian sources or fish. One of my stepsons has been a no-fish, only-vegetarian-food kind of guy his whole life. While cooking with these stipulations in mind, I find that kombu (kelp) seaweed and dried shiitake mushrooms are essential ingredients for good vegetarian soup stock. Miso also helps to add a deep richness in flavor, which is essential.

You can forego the tempura entirely and simply make the broth and noodle soup. The tempura simply makes this into a larger, heavier meal. Don’t run off! There are a lot of ingredients coming atcha… but for a tasty bowl of noodles, please read on.

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Miso Mushroom Udon with Tempura Vegetables

Serves 8 or so hungry folks.

Ingredients:

For the udon broth:
2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
1 small yellow onion, peeled and quartered
4 cloves garlic, peeled
1 large carrot, cut into large chunks
one 3″ piece of ginger, peeled then minced or grated
2 heaping tablespoons white miso
1/4 cup tamari or shoyu
2 tablespoons fresh squeezed lime juice
2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
1/4 to 1 teaspoon ground wasabi
0.5 ounces dried porcini mushrooms
0.5 ounces dried shiitake mushrooms
1 large piece kombu seaweed
1 teaspoon sea salt
10 cups No-Chicken broth

For the udon:
24 ounces wide udon noodles
1/2 cup diced green onion
12 ounces extra firm tofu, cut into bite-size cubes
1/2 cup fresh shiitake mushrooms, sliced thin

For the tempura:
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 tablespoons baking powder
1/4 cup cornstarch
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
2 eggs, beaten
1 1/2 cups ice cold water

1 large garnet yam (about 3/4 pound), peeled and sliced in 1/8″-thick rounds
1 large Japanese sweet potato (about 1/2 pound), peeled and sliced in 1/8″-thick rounds
1 small zucchini, ends cut off then sliced in 1/8″-thick rounds
1/2 pound fresh broccoli florets (bite sized pieces)
1/2 pound fresh string beans, ends snipped off
2 large carrots, peeled then sliced into sticks about 3″ long and 1/4″ thick

approximately 3 cups canola or peanut oil
1/4 cup toasted sesame oil
2-inch piece of ginger, peeled

Possible condiments to serve alongside:
toasted sesame oil
chili pepper oil
soy sauce/tamari/shoyu
garlic chili sauce
toasted sesame seeds
furikake

Directions:

Prepare the broth: In a stock pot, heat the two tablespoons of sesame oil over medium-high heat. Add the quartered onion, garlic, carrot and minced ginger. Cook for a minute or two, until fragrant. Next, add the miso, tamari, lime juice, vinegar and wasabi, stirring until the miso is well incorporated. Add the dried mushrooms, kombu, salt and broth, stirring to combine everything. Turn the heat to simmer/low heat and allow the broth to cook, covered, for at least one hour. After the broth has cooked for at least an hour, strain it into another pot. Discard the solid ingredients, cover the pot with the broth and allow it to sit on low heat until needed.

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Prepare the udon noodles: Cook the noodles according to the package directions, then drain and run under cold water to stop the cooking process. Drain again, then set aside until needed.

Prepare the tempura batter: Stir together the flour, baking powder, cornstarch, baking soda, and salt until well combined. Add the eggs and cold water to the dry ingredients, then use chopsticks or a fork to mix everything together very quickly, just until the ingredients are combined. It’s okay if the batter is a bit clumpy. Fill a larger bowl with ice, then place the bowl containing your batter directly on the ice. You want your tempura batter as cold as possible before frying.

Prepare the tempura vegetables: Preheat your oven to 200º F. Line two rimmed baking sheets with a couple layers of paper towels.

Fill a large frying pan with the canola or peanut oil, sesame oil, and the 2-inch piece of ginger. Heat the oil to 350º F. Once the oil is hot, dip the work in batches to dip the vegetables into the tempura batter, allowing any excess batter to drip, then gently lower into the preheated oil. Cook for a minute or so, then flip to cook the other side. The batter should be a golden color. Use a slotted spoon to remove the vegetables from the hot oil, then transfer them to the prepared baking sheets in your preheated oven. Repeat until all the vegetables have been cooked.

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Prepare the udon for serving: Turn the heat up under the broth, bringing it to a simmer. While the broth is heating, arrange the cooked noodles in each bowl (about one cup of noodles). Arrange some tofu cubes, sliced fresh shiitake mushrooms, and a generous amount of green onion over the noodles. Next, spoon some of the hot broth over the noodles (the heat from the broth will gently heat the noodles back up without overcooking them). Serve the bowls of udon with the tempura. We like to dip the fried tempura into the broth while eating our noodles! You can serve each bowl with the suggested condiments as well, allowing everyone to add as much or as little of the additional ingredients as they’d prefer.

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Posted in Dinner, Lunch, Meatless Monday, Sauces, Soup, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Day to Day Life: Week Nineteen

The last week looked a bit like this:

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So many pretty spring blooms everywhere.

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Monday was Cinco de Mayo. There was a lot of citrus involved…

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Because a lot of fresh citrus means really good fresh margaritas!

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Perhaps another good bad, or bad good, or bad bad idea for Cinco de Mayo — queso fundido (which is actually more greasy than fun, but delicious nonetheless…).

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Baked tofu “fish” sticks.

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Love these colors.

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More spring-time blooming…

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Lots of Mexi-meals this past week… two different homemade sauces that were favorites thus far.

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I used the same sauces with homemade tortillas to make enchiladas one night.

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Boys having some brother time before Silas’s bed time one night.

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These two are always filled with shenanigans.

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Pasta and salad one night… one of my favorite kinds of meals.

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I made this granola for the week. One of my favorites thus far.

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Miss Thang.

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A ridiculous pizza. We can share next week, perhaps…

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Two Louisiana musicians rehearsing in the house…

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Miso mushroom udon with tempura veggies!

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Leftover plain noodles were a great excuse to make homemade drunken noodles on a whim.

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Vincent and his mom came by for a visit today and brought Mr. Teddy! How does a person say no to this face?! P.S. Crazy dog lady… I know.

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Saturday Sites: Week Nineteen

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  1. What do moms really want for Mother’s Day? These things?

  2. Some of these two ingredient sandwiches sound delicious!

  3. This microscopic look at tears fascinated me.

  4. In an entirely different way, this cauliflower chowder also intrigued me.

  5. While I don’t have any biological kids of my own, I remember this feeling

  6. Still on the hunt for the perfect chocolate chip cookie… This recipe looks like a good one to try.

  7. A quick browse through this site will make even the shittiest day a little better.

  8. I’d like this coconut brown rice pudding every day, please.

  9. Burgers of any variety are far from the top of my list of favorite foods, but this one sounds like something I’d happily try.

  10. I am certain this peanut butter hot fudge sauce would go over well in this house… by the spoonful, mouthful, etc., etc.

  11. This dance super-cut is fun to watch… I like watching the wardrobe changes and the objects that both disappear and show up on the shelves in the background.

  12. While we’re at it… sorry… notsorry. AHH!

  13. I enjoyed reading these 29 life lessons. And seeing as I shall turn 29 one month from today, it made me begin to think about the things I’ve learned in the last year.

  14. Bubbly kombucha makes my belly happy… this recipe sounds yummy. I have a healthy jun scoby and am currently trying to grow a kombucha scoby… this goes to the top of my list for flavors to experiment with. Lavender also sounds like a flavor I’d enjoy.

  15. Let’s be real. Mother’s Day isn’t some happy, wonderful celebration for everyone. Take heart… In case tomorrow is a difficult time for you, perhaps you’ll find some comfort in these words. I know I did last year and revisited for this coming year as well.

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Blueberry Coconut Granola

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I am on a mission: from here on out, I shall post as many granola recipes as possible! Jussst kidding. Can I tell you its taken me almost thirty years to appreciate a humble bowl of homemade granola? I don’t know why I always assumed granola to be a slightly stale bag of oats, featuring slightly sweet flavors? This weird cereal that doesn’t absorb the milk in my bowl, or even leave a bowl of sweet milk worth of drinking once all the cereal had been eaten…

These days, I enjoy making granola because I can make a giant batch with little effort, and it covers breakfast for everyone without me having to do an ounce of thinking in the wee morning hours. In fact, I can sleep in while my husband feeds the kids a bowl of granola with either yogurt or vanilla rice milk — depending on their preference that particular morning. That is definitely my kind of breakfast-making!

This particular granola isn’t overly sweet, which I like. The coconut flavoring is two-fold: both with large coconut flakes within the granola, as well as the coconut oil that permeates the ingredients while everything bakes. I intentionally kept the spices out of this recipe, as to let the coconut and blueberries really come through in the final granola. You can eat this granola by the handful, be it small pinches throughout the day or a hungry-girl fist-full (I’ve done both). You can sprinkle it over yogurt (Brown Cow cream top maple being my personal fave). You can pour it in a bowl then top that off with your preferred milk and sliced fresh fruit. Really you cannot go wrong. This granola has been a hit with the kids, my husband and myself — I hope the same is true for you!

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Blueberry Coconut Granola

Yields about 10 cups of granola.

Ingredients:

5 cups old-fashioned rolled oats
1 1/2 cups crunchy brown rice cereal
1 1/2 cups unsweetened coconut chips
1 1/2 cups chopped walnuts
1 cup chopped cashews
3/4 cup raw sunflower seeds
1/2 cup ground flax seed
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/4 cup light brown sugar, packed
1/2 cup smooth, unsweetened peanut butter
1/2 cup maple syrup
1/2 cup honey or agave syrup
1/2 cup coconut oil
1/4 cup olive oil
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup dried blueberries

Directions:

Position the racks in the upper and lower thirds of the oven then preheat to 300 degrees F. Line two rimmed baking sheets with parchment paper.

Measure the oats, rice cereal, coconut chips, walnuts, cashews, sunflower seeds, flax, and salt into a large bowl, then stir well.

In a small pot, add the brown sugar, peanut butter, maple syrup, honey or agave, coconut oil and olive oil. Stir over medium-high heat until smooth. Remove from heat and stir in the vanilla extract. Add the wet ingredients to the dry, stirring everything until the dry ingredients are evenly coated.

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Divide the mixture between the two prepared sheet pans, spreading it out evenly. Bake, stirring the granola once or twice, until golden brown, about 35-40 minutes. You want the granola to reach an even browning, including a nice toasty brown on the coconut chips.

Remove the baking sheets from your oven and sprinkle the blueberries over the oat mixture. Allow the granola to cool completely (it will crisp up as it cools) then transfer the granola to airtight containers, stirring to distribute the blueberries throughout the granola.

Store the containers of granola at room temperature for a 2-3 weeks. You can also freeze some of it if you won’t eat it that quickly.

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Easy Watermelon Margaritas

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When it comes to cocktails, increasingly I find myself of the opinion that minimal ingredients provide a better drink. Especially when I am making a drink at home. There was a time in my life where I didn’t think this was the case. Probably around the same time I concocted “liquor soup” for my roommates and I, served in a bowl with a straw. (Bad decision.)

These days, I enjoy better quality liquor that doesn’t need to be too dressed up or masked. Generally I am a bourbon kind of lady. Knob Creek is my preference, on the rocks or straight. My husband, on the other hand, is a tequila kind of guy.

One of my favorite tequila cocktails is a simple, classic margarita. When using good tequila and fresh citrus, it’s refreshing and delicious. The following is another close favorite and a slightly sweeter take on the classic margarita. When watermelons start showing up in our grocery store, immediately I begin to think about watermelon juice, which is one of my favorite beverages. Turned into an adult beverage? Absolutely.

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Easy Watermelon Margaritas

Yields 4 drinks.

Ingredients:
4 cups watermelon, cubed
2 tablespoons agave or honey
4 limes, 3 juiced and 1 cut into wedges for garnish
1 small valencia orange, juiced
8 ounces tequila
ice

Directions:
In a blender, puree the watermelon and agave or honey until smooth. Pour the puree through a mesh strainer, transferring the strained juice to a pitcher. Add the lime juice, orange juice and tequila. Stir to combine.

Fill 4 glasses to the rim with ice then pour the margarita evenly into each glass. Garnish each with a lime wedge and serve immediately.

Enjoy!

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Meatless Monday : Cinco de Mayo Recipes

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We eat a lot of Mexican-style food year-round. For a vegetarian, the possibilities are vast. True, there are many non-vegetarian options as well, but so much of what my love for Mexican food centers around is the flavors. The complexities of heat, taste, depth, spices, and balance of each separate element. This year I’m planning a serve yourself taco menu featuring staples like beans, rice, cheese, guacamole, crema, perhaps a guajillo salsa, a roasted tomatillo salsa, baked tofu “fish,” and homemade corn tortillas. There shall be margaritas, because they’re an essential part of the menu. And Mondays.

Any thoughts on what you’re making or eating this evening? If you’re in need of some entirely vegetarian Cinco de Mayo recipes, here’s a quick round-up of some ideas:

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Frychos make a great appetizer or full course on their own.

Some other easy side dishes:

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Spanish Red Rice

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Cheesy Anaheim and Poblano Pepper Rice

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Slow Cooked Black Beans

Some sauces and salsas that can easily accompany any Mexican meal:

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Ancho Chili and Pepita Mole

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Avocado Green Tomato Salsa

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Green Chile and Tomatillo Enchilada Sauce

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Roasted Poblano Guacamole

Looking for some main dish ideas? Here are some recipes:

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Roasted Poblano Chilaquiles with Fried Eggs (great for breakfast or anytime!)

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Crispy Tofu Tacos with Creamy Roasted Poblano Sauce and Grilled Cotija Cheese

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Chorizo and Cheese Enchiladas

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Seitan Carnitas

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Jalapeño Cheese Tamales

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Tamale Casserole

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Tofu and Cheese Enchiladas

A couple beverage ideas to round things out:

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Classic Margarita

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Horchata

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Mangorita

Happy celebrating!

Posted in Appetizer, Booze, Dinner, Life, Lunch, Meatless Meat, Sauces, Sides, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Day to Day Life: Week Eighteen

The last week, in photos:

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Marbled morning sky.

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Accidental color-coded grocery shopping.

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Spinach + cheese & roasted pepper + cheese tamales.

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Slowly growing things…

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Roasted strawberry buttermilk cake is my favorite Spring cake.

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Roasted tomatillo salsa is delicious on tamales… and everything.

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I planted these little guys to move onto our front porch.

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More blue skies…

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Mr. Business wearing people-clothes, squeaking his ball while trying to simultaneously catch bees.

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Kitchen window buddies. If I talk to them (like a crazy lady) they cock their heads like this.

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Leftover tamales.

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PINK.

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Bathroom graffiti…

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Apparently we cannot eat enough of this pizza.

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Always play time for these little dogs.

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Overnight oats for a Sunday lazy morning.

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First iris of the season opened!

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Saturday Sites: Week Eighteen

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  1. Here are some fun maps showing what the state you’re in, or from, is known for…

  2. My kind of sandwich looks something like this one!

  3. Whenever I have some sort of ailment or illness that seems to be approaching, I try to use natural alternatives to over the counter treatments. The only exception is for migraines, which I’ve periodically gotten since I was about 13. Here are some natural treatments for some more embarrassing health concerns! Some I’ve tried, others I’ve never needed to.

  4. What do you do when you’re home alone?

  5. I want everything about these tacos. Immediately.

  6. I shall remember a number of these camping hacks for this summer… P.S. I don’t like camping. P.P.S. Silas has already inquired, “Can we go camping this summer… Like, for more than one day?!”

  7. This lip sync-off is so good. Haha

  8. Have you ever had savory oats? I am seeing recipes more and more often, but haven’t tried them. This recipe intrigues me.

  9. I almost died from laughing some of these texts.

  10. This article fascinates me.

  11. I LOVE tuna sammiches and these nine varieties from Saveur sounds like fun future experimenting.

  12. My husband introduced me to this video earlier this week. We laughed so much watching it.

  13. This lavender key limeade sounds like something I’d enjoy making and drinking.

  14. I wonder if this actually works? And then my late-teen, early-20 self says, “Wait. What? What is the point of drinking if not to feel drunk?!”

  15. NOODLES. They could be in my everyday diet. These spicy Indonesian noodles sound YUMMY.

  16. There is a bakery in London called St. John and their doughnuts look incredible… When I found their doughnut recipe I decided they will be my yearly fried doughnut indulgence soon.

  17. This video made me smile. I miss being in the water.

  18. This giant cinnamon roll sounds genius (and tasty).

  19. WHY does this exist… and WHY can’t I look away?!

  20. This article… I can relate.

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No-Knead Pizza Dough + Tomato Basil Pizza Recipes

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Last week, we started off the week with homemade pizza, made with my sourdough crust. We had leftover pizza the night after. The next day, there was this risotto. Thursday night, we had a spinach lasagna somewhat reminiscent of this one. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday? We ate the pizza I am going to share with you now. Not because there were leftovers… there weren’t leftovers. I made this pizza three days in a row because we are OBSESSED.

Seeing as we had pizza for five out of seven nights last week, I probably don’t need to tell you we like these sauced-up, cheese-topped, pies around here. I had seen Tracy Shutterbean‘s no-knead dough recipe over a year ago, but always told myself that in order to be a pizza enthusiast (is that a thing?), I had to make a damn good rolled, stretched, kneaded dough. So that’s what I did. Over and over again. But let’s be real. As often as I crave pizza, I don’t always have the extra time it takes to make a kneaded dough. Let’s be really real – it’s not even an issue of “extra time” – sometimes I just don’t want to mess with kneading, or yeast-proofing, or rolling dough.

The beauty of this dough is two fold. One, it’s RIDICULOUSLY easy. Throw things in a bowl, stir, cover, wait. Ta-da! DOUGH! And two, it’s DELICIOUS. One of our favorite pizza places in San Francisco is Golden Boy in North Beach. Their pizza is a foccacia type of crust, topped with minimal sauce and cheese (or pepperoni, garlic + clam, pesto veggie, or meat + veggie combo). It’s excellent for lunch, dinner, an alcohol-soaking-up-device when you’ve drank too much, or for any occasion.

This crust turns out thin, crispy, and absorbs just the right amount of sauce while it’s baking in the oven. I’m including an easy (and DAMN TASTY) cheese pizza recipe along with the dough. It’s the one I made all three nights. We found that while pizza is really good just out of the oven, this one is even better when its cooled to just slightly above room temperature… Enjoy and I hope you have more pizza restraint than we do! (But I fully encourage you not to!)

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No-Knead Pizza Dough

Yields enough dough for two pizzas baked in 13×18-inch rimmed baking sheets.

Recipe modified slightly from Tracy Shutterbean

Ingredients:
3 3/4 cups flour
2 1/2 teaspoons active dry yeast
3/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon sugar
1 1/3 cups warm water
olive oil for pan

Directions:
Stir together the flour, yeast, salt and sugar in bowl. Add the water, then use a spoon or your hands to mix everything together until blended into a ball of dough (this should take no more than a few minutes).

Cover the dough and let it rise at room temperature for about 2 hours. It may be slightly less than doubled in size.

Dump the dough onto a lightly floured surface and cut it in half. Oil a 13×18 inch rimmed baking sheet liberally with a good quality olive oil. Gently place a ball of dough on the pan, stretching and pressing it out toward the edges. If it springs back wait five minutes and then continue. The dough is very thin. If it tears, simply pinch it back together.

Moving on to pizza-making…

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Tomato Basil Pizza

Yields two 13×18 inch pizzas.

Recipe also slightly modified from Tracy Shutterbean

Ingredients:
3 1/2 cups of your preferred tomato sauce (this is my go-to)
a few pinches of red pepper flakes
12-18 large leaves of fresh basil, chopped
24 ounces fresh mozzarella cheese
parmesan cheese for topping
optional 1 teaspoon dried oregano

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Directions:
Preheat your oven to 500° F.

Spread half of the tomato sauce evenly over each baking sheet of dough, going all the way to the edges. Be sure the sauce is spread evenly, so no sauce piles up in the center of the pie. Sprinkle with a few pinches of red pepper flakes, top each pie with the chopped basil, then tear pieces of the fresh mozzarella and scatter it over each pizza.

Bake for 18-20 minutes until the edges are slightly charred. Sprinkle with the oregano, extra basil and fresh parmesan cheese and serve hot or at room temperature.

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Posted in Appetizer, Dinner, Kids, Lunch, Snacks, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments