Day to Day Life: Week Seventeen

A look at the last week:

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So many good cloud days… it happens when it’s cold, cold, cold…

photo 5Little seedless watermelons were on sale… 8 cups of watermelon juice, gone after just a few hours.

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Partially into watermelon margaritas…

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Silas has been asking me to rearrange his room so his bed is “right in the center!” Early in the week while he was at his mom’s house, I said, why not… and surprised him by moving everything around and doing a good spring cleaning. When he saw it a couple days later, his response was “WHOAAAAA! I sooooooo appreciate this!”

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Oatmeal blueberry cookies one day.

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There was a LOT of pizza this week… this was one of my favorites – pesto with fresh crimini mushrooms and goat cheese. YUM.

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Roasted asparagus risotto one night. Yummy.

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A batch of apple and pumpkin seed flax granola for the week.

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This boy is a handful, often… A total BOY-BOY, rowdy, full of energy, argumentative, demanding, loud, independent… but one night he asked me to tuck him in. By the time I went upstairs to do so, he was passed out like this – his little buddies arranged from one side to the other, including a tiny puppy on his arm. I guess he is also just sweet, sincere, loving, gentle-when-he-chooses, amazing little dude.

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The beauty of homemade bread…

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Is that the same recipe can be completely versatile.

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A giant lasagna with homemade marinara for family dinner night with the kids and Nana.

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I love the colors of Spring around this valley I live in.

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After a dinner of homemade pizza one night… then leftover pizza for breakfast and lunch the next day, I was OVER leftover pizza for dinner, which my husband and Vincent wanted. So… organic saimin with chili oil and pepper flakes? Absolutely what I ate instead.

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Panini sammiching with my hubby for lunch…

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These pizzas happened three different times this week… OBSESSED much? Totally, but with good reason. So simple, so good!

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A hippie deep hair conditioning was required… Egg yolk, coconut oil, lavender oil, apple cider vinegar, baking soda… It makes my hair so crispy and glue-like simultaneously until washed!

photo 4The most amazing, light, fluffy belgian waffle batter ever!

photo 3Good for weekend breakfasting.

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Speaking of weekend breakfasts… Silas had a sleepover at our house last night. No biggie until they’re up before 8:30, hungry, and needing food fuel. I am totally looking forward to the day he and his buddies can cook their own breakfasts after a sleepover! ;)

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A wish, for you.

 

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Saturday Sites: Week Seventeen

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  1. What do you wonder about? What do kids wonder about? These sorts of things, apparently…

  2. Spring time is asparagus time… and I am obsessed. THIS SANDWICH. I want it.

  3. When I was 16 or so, I discovered Natalie Merchant and my moody teenage self appreciated her so much. Watching this video, turns out my late-20-year-old-self still loves her.

  4. When my husband and I were in New York a few years ago, we discovered the halal food truck that had gigantic lines of folks waiting for food… I waited. And understood the craze after I consumed my plate of food. This homemade version of the beloved meat + rice dish sounds spot on. I shall vegetarian-ize it SOON.

  5. This dad, a professional filmmaker from the Netherlands filmed his daughter, from 0 months to 14-years-old then edited it all together to show her growing up. Crazy.

  6. To ALL you moms!

  7. Ding dongs! Cake! Salted caramel! Salted caramel ding dong cake? Mmhmm.

  8. This little dude will make you smile.

  9. I love nerdy things… like graphs. Graphs depicting the 20-year-old experience? Spectacular nerdiness.

  10. This ice cream recipe is going on my list of things to make in the near future!

  11. A while ago, DOVE released this ad, attempting to show women that they are more beautiful than they think they are. The parody, featuring a sketch artist who did a mens’ version? I sat in disbelief. (Kara, this is totally for you.)

  12. Speaking of parodies, The Onion’s take on how to live gluten free

  13. I love carrot cake and enjoy smoothies… Carrot cake smoothie? Yes.

  14. When I was in college, one of my roommates and I deemed ourselves old women. We even had “old lady names” — Helga and Maude, I believe. I took one of those silly quizzes, to find out what kind of old person I’d be? Apparently I will be “80 years young” – I’ll stay as active as an 18 year old! You will do lots of things you barely have the energy to do now, like dancing and going to the gym at 5 am. You have your regular bingo night, and you drink like an Irish man at his prime. Age is nothing but a number!

  15. This pasta sounds yummy!

  16. I am pretty sure this is mostly true about the place I grew up…

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Lemon Blueberry Coconut Muffins

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I think the reason I like muffins is because they’re almost like having cupcakes for breakfast. But its also been my experience that muffin batter is much less finicky cupcake batter and I thoroughly appreciate that fact. The other reason I like muffins is that they can make a filling breakfast when supplemented with fresh fruit… but all the real work happens the night before when my night owl brain still works.

This is a one-bowl type of muffin, requiring only a few other things – measuring cup, measuring spoons, and a stirring device. (Minimal dishes for the win!) I tweak this same basic recipe almost every time I make muffins, mainly changing only the spices, fruits, and add-ins like coconut or nuts.

These particular muffins are super moist inside, but maintain a good slightly crisp outside. Lemons and blueberries are one of my favorite combinations of flavor, so I am probably biased about the excellence of such a muffin… but they really are good and kid-approved as well!

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Lemon Blueberry Coconut Muffins

Yields 6-8 jumbo sized muffins or 1 1/2 dozen standard sized muffins.

Ingredients:
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon fresh ground nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 tablespoons ground flax seeds
1/4 cup unsalted butter, melted
1 egg, beaten
6 ounces plain greek yogurt
zest from one large lemon
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1/2 cup milk (dairy, soy, almond, etc. are all OK)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/3 cup unsweetened coconut flakes
1 cup blueberries (frozen or fresh OK)

Directions:

Preheat your oven to 425 degrees F. Either line or lightly grease some muffin tins.

In a large bowl, stir together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, nutmeg, cinnamon and ground flax seeds.

Stir in the melted butter, egg, yogurt, lemon zest and juice, milk and vanilla until the batter comes together (it’ll be thick). Gently fold in the coconut and blueberries.

Bake for 18-20 minutes, until lightly golden brown on top and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Let the muffins cool completely before storing them in an airtight container.

Muffins can be kept at room temperature in an airtight container for 1-2 days, or up to a week refrigerated.

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Meatless Monday: Pesto Pasta Salad

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We are into the swing of little league season, since Silas made the minor leagues this year. That generally means there are at least a couple games weekly, including one mid-week game. Not a huge deal, except those mid-week games tend to fall just late enough into the evening that prime dinner hour comes and goes as we’re sitting at the ballpark while the sun goes down.

No biggie. As it turns out, bringing food to an outdoor sporting event makes the time pass by much more quickly. It almost works as a distraction from the cold weather that loves to roll in halfway through the game, if it wasn’t there to begin with. I have never been particularly good at picnic meal planning, however. Perhaps it’s the overexcitement of wanting to make everything good tasting and flamboyant. I’m not generally an easy slap-together-sandwich kind of girl (this is not an attempt at bragging; if anything it causes me great stress when trying to plan a picnic).

That said, when we were facing a 5:30 game, I knew we’d be there until at least 7:00, if not 7:30. Dinner to go seemed the smart way to plan things. I decided on Italian style pressed sandwiches filled with tofurky, piquillo peppers, fontina and muenster cheeses, pesto, and pepperoncinis. Then as I tried to decide on things to eat with the sandwiches, pasta salad rattled around my head. I knew it would be filling, but the flavors seemed to work with the sandwich fillings, too. This salad is very easy to throw together, but tasty nonetheless. You can make it 24 hours ahead (the flavors melt together better the longer it sits anyway).

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Pesto Pasta Salad

Serves 6-8.

Ingredients:
8 ounces dried penne pasta
1/3 cup vegenaise
1/4 cup prepared pesto
3 tablespoons gorgonzola cheese
2 tablespoons milk
1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
2 cloves garlic, minced fine
1 cup halved cherry tomatoes
1 cup sweet peppers, diced small
1 cup monterey jack cheese, cut into small cubes
1/3 cup fresh basil, chopped
salt and pepper to your liking

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Directions:
Cook the pasta according to the package directions, until just slightly past al dente. Pour into a colander and allow the cooked pasta to cool to room temperature.

Meanwhile, in a bowl, whisk together the vegenaise, pesto, gorgonzola, milk, vinegar and minced garlic until thoroughly combined.

Gently toss the cooled pasta, tomatoes, sweet pepper, cheese cubes, and basil together in a large mixing bowl. Add the pesto dressing to the mixture, stirring everything together until well mixed. Taste, then add salt and fresh ground pepper to your liking.

Cover and refrigerate at least one hour before serving.

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Posted in Appetizer, Dinner, Lunch, Meatless Monday, Salad, Sides, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Day to Day Life: Week Sixteen

A look at the last week:

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Since I don’t sleep like a normal person anyway, it was easy to catch some glimpses at the lunar eclipse and blood moon that happened this week!

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Blueberry lemon coconut muffins for breakfast-ing.

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Little creepy crawlies.

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Baked crispy tofu is one of my favorite tofus.

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Lots of blue skies this week!

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A chocolate overload…

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To make these cookies!

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Pressed Italian style veggie sammiches one night…

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Great for a picnic dinner at a certain little boy’s midweek evening baseball game.

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Morning blue skies.

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This may be the creepiest snack there ever was.

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We were out in the Applegate one night, where my husband had a gig with some other musicians from Portland.

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It was a fun show.

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This guy also lives at the lodge where we stayed. I may have turned into a crazy cat lady. Levitating kitties will inspire that, though.

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Morning river reflections.

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Cooking some Spanish red rice to go along with taco night…

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While working in the garden, this girl kept stealing my freshly picked weeds out of the bucket.

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Weekend breakfast with these two dudes.

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Shades of pink.

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Spring skies around here are the best… rain, no rain, clouds, sun, no clouds, blue, gray… All in a matter of minutes.

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Grilled cheese and tomato basil soup – always a win.

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Ta-da! An Easter-ita.

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Saturday Sites : Week Sixteen

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  1. I am recently obsessed with tiny houses and imagining what it would be like to live in these spaces.

  2. This article was a short, but good read. “…We must learn to see our relationships, not as drudgery that we endure so that one day we will arrive at this relational perfection but as a shared journey toward an ideal love that meets both of our needs, most of the time.” Yes.

  3. The inclusion of tea in this smoothie intrigues me.

  4. Perhaps some of the most profound portraits I’ve ever seen.

  5. I’m not sure why I never thought of flavoring fried eggs, but this version sounds tasty!

  6. What color is your aura? This silly quiz tells me mine is silver. A silver aura shows that a soul contains much experience and knowledge. You’ve probably been called an old soul. Because you’re good at nurturing and encouraging others, friends come to you when they need advice. Although you tend to serve as a mentor or guide in relationships, you are especially receptive to new ideas and unheard-of possibilities.

  7. Because when you try to eat healthier when that isn’t what you do all the time… it’s a sure-fire way to grow a crazy-brain! #37 – every time.

  8. I am increasingly interested in growing things…outdoors and indoors!

  9. This sandwich would probably go over well in our home.

  10. Dear insomniac brain, I really do love sleep… you should too.

  11. A list of eighteen ways to live successfully, which have nothing to do with money and everything to do with genuinely, happily, taking in life. Loved this list.

  12. One of my favorite blogs and one of my favorite spring veggies!

  13. I may have to read this every single Monday.

  14. Cake! Lemon! Blueberries! Buttermilk! OKAY, I can get into this.

  15. You’ve probably seen goats yelling like humans by now. Have you seen humans yelling like goats yelling like people? Bwahaha.

  16. 21st century speech impediment

  17. Although one of my favorite things to eat as a kid was Mollie Katzen’s cauliflower spaghetti that my mom would cook from the Moosewood Cookbook, its only been within my adult life that I’ve really learned to like cauliflower… These cauliflower bites sound delicious.

  18. Go ahead and click: make everything okay!

  19. I would like to eat these cookies… that is all.

  20. Science and perfect pie building? This is how my brain works all the time.

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Cocktail Classic: Vodka Gimlet

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It’s Friday, which obviously means happy hour is both necessary and probably well earned/needed after the work week. Of course I am a firm believer in happy hour whenever needed or desired, not just Fridays. I am pretty boring when it comes to such things. Cocktails are not my particular thing – I enjoy a good beer, or a good whiskey on the rocks.

But… I also like trying new things. So if we’re out, I will certainly try a new drink, or a new dish, so long as it sounds tasty. I’m not sure where I learned about vodka gimlets. I think it started backwards – I had vodka and limes, and went on the hunt for a drink that would use both. A gimlet is one of those drinks wherein the real beauty is in its simplicity. You can find various recipes that more or less center around three things: vodka or gin, lime juice, and sugar. Or traditionalists who say the only real things that belong in a gimlet are gin, lime juice, and ice.

I say use whatever tastes good to you: if you like your drinks sweeter, add more simple syrup. If you prefer tart, add more lime juice or simply decrease the sugar syrup. Prefer gin? Use that instead of vodka. Personally, I like a stronger cocktail that isn’t overly sweet but doesn’t just taste like alcohol (if it isn’t good whiskey or tequila). Feel free to use this recipes loosely and tweak it to your own preferences!

Cheers!

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Cocktail Classic: Vodka Gimlet

Yields one cocktail.

Ingredients:
2 ounces good quality vodka
1 ounce fresh lime juice
1 ounce simple syrup *
ice cubes
lime wheel or lime zest for garnish, if desired

*To make a simple syrup, you need one part water and one part sugar (i.e. one cup of each). Bring the water to a boil then dissolve the sugar into it, stirring constantly. When the sugar fully dissolves, remove the pan from the heat. Allow the syrup to cool completely before using.

Directions:

Fill a cocktail shaker with ice. Add the vodka, lime and simple syrup.

Shake rapidly for about 20 seconds, then strain into a glass filled with ice. Add the garnish if you’d like.

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Salted Caramel Macaroons

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There are some things about where I grew up that I miss incredibly much, often. The ocean, for one… the way I could wander in and around it barefoot, in a swimsuit, sandy salt water hair strewn all over the place. The constant warmth and sunshine that balances with the tradewinds and island breezes off the water. The fresh produce everywhere. Mangoes, lychee, apple bananas, guavas, mountain apples, papayas, lilikoi…

There are two types of produce I took for granted as a kid though. First off, avocados. They grew in abundance throughout our backyard that is being regularly maintained by the guys for avoiding pest control issues. So many, growing so rapidly, and I despised them. The other? Fresh coconut. Any kind of coconut, really. Fresh, dried, shredded, sweetened, coconut water… I remember hacking off the husks from fresh coconuts, then taking a hammer and nail to pierce the “eyes” of the seed, then finally cracking open the coconut and being horribly disappointed by my own distaste for the actual coconut flavored insides.

Of course now, at the ripe old age of twenty-eight and thousands of miles away from the island I grew up, I have learned to appreciate both avocados and coconuts. Purchasing either of these things breaks my heart every time. They’re expensive, as neither is native to where I live. Regardless, I almost always have avocados on hand. And most certainly we have some kind of coconut on hand – be it shredded coconut, coconut water I love to add into smoothies or drink plain, coconut oil, coconut flour…

It’s a good thing I do keep shredded coconut in our pantry because when I saw the following recipe I had to make it immediately. There are few recipes that hit me with such urgency, but these cookies demanded attention. With such a short ingredient list, these macaroons are not at all intimidating to make, but they are melt-in-your-mouth delicious and decadent at the same time.

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Salted Caramel Macaroons

Recipe slightly adapted from Tracy Shutterbean.

Yields about 12 macaroons

Ingredients:
3/4 cup sweetened condensed milk
3/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 2/3 cups sweetened shredded coconut
1 large egg white
1/8 teaspoon sea salt

1/4 cup granulated sugar
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1 tablespoon unsalted butter

Directions:
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F, placing a rack in the center of the oven. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

In a large bowl, mix the sweetened condensed milk and vanilla together. Slowly stir in the shredded coconut, mixing until well combined.

Add the egg white and 1/8 teaspoon of salt to a small bowl (or your stand mixer bowl if you’re using it to whip the egg white) and whip on medium-high until very stiff peaks form (about 2 minutes).

Use a rubber spatula to gently fold the egg whites in with the coconut mixture. Using a spoon, form the mixture into balls approximately 1 1/2 inches in diameter then place them on the baking sheet about 1 inch apart.

Place the sheet into the oven to bake for 20-25 minutes. After 20 minutes, start checking for coloring. Look for a light golden color on top, and a nicely tanned color underside.

Remove from the oven leaving the macaroons on the sheet pan until they’re cool enough to pull off (3-4 minutes). Transfer macaroons to a cooling rack and let them cool completely.

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While the macaroons cool, prepare the caramel.

Place the sugar in a small saucepan over medium heat and don’t touch it until the sugar starts to melt. It will turn pale yellow and then start to darken. When it just starts to darken, start stirring carefully but rapidly to fully distribute any unmelted sugar throughout the pot. Keep stirring, as the sugar will easily burn. Stir until all the sugar is melted and there are no lumps. Turn the heat down to low and when the sugar has a nice copper color to it, add the butter. Stir in the butter and add the 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Remove the pot from the heat. When the caramel has a golden color to it, remove from the heat. Use a small spoon and drizzle the caramel on top of the macaroons.

The macaroons will keep uncovered for 3 to 5 days, for about 3 weeks in an airtight container in the fridge.

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Posted in Baking, Dessert, Gluten-Free, Kids, Snacks | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Meatless Monday: Barbecue “Pulled” Seitan

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One of my favorite things about learning how to cook has been figuring out how to make ingredients that, originally, I would have bought already made. (Then griped at due to the price versus the quality/quantity of the foods I end up with.) Pesto, breads, certain cookies and treats, hummus, etc. When I decided to experiment with making homemade seitan, the initial reason was that it ran us close to $5-6 for 6 ounces of seitan. To feed a family of four that includes a two dudes over 6-feet-tall and a rapidly growing 8 year old who is also nearly 5-feet-tall these days, that amount of seitan doesn’t go very far. $15 for just the seitan alone seemed silly to me when I could purchase a bag of vital wheat gluten for 5 bucks and make four times as much seitan with it.

The thing about seitan is it’s super versatile. It takes on flavors well, while maintaining a very “meaty” consistency. My husband is a Southern-born guy. He’s been a vegetarian for many years and therefore some of the more Southern dishes he did grow up around, he hasn’t been able to eat for decades now. Mainly I came up with this particular barbecued seitan with him in mind. When we had these sandwiches, one bite in, he told me, “this is just like eating a barbecue sandwich down South.” Mission accomplished.

I encourage you to read through the entire recipe before attempting to make it. The final step of making the seitan into “barbecue,” is filled with a description of what I do personally, rather than real set instructions. Use with your own discretion! :)

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Barbecue “Pulled” Seitan

Yields nearly three pounds of seitan.

Ingredients:

For the seitan:
12.3 oz firm silken tofu
4 cups vital wheat gluten
6 large crimini mushrooms
1 shallot, peeled
2 tablespoons tomato paste
1 tablespoon dijon mustard
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon vegan worcestershire sauce
1 1/2 teaspoons liquid smoke
1 1/2 teaspoons sea salt
1 teaspoon granulated garlic
1/2 teaspoon celery sauce
1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
1 1/2 cups No-Chicken or vegetable broth

For the barbecue sauce:
24 ounces ketchup
1 3/4 cups water
1/3 cup apple cider vinegar
1/4 cup light brown sugar
2 tablespoons vegan worcestershire sauce
2 tablespoons tomato paste
1 tablespoon unsulphured blackstrap molasses
1 tablespoon dijon mustard
1 tablespoon granulated garlic
2 teaspoons dried oregano
1 teaspoon liquid smoke
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/4 teaspoon red chili pepper flakes

Directions:

Prepare the seitan: Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F. In a food processor or blender, combine all the ingredients for the seitan except for the broth. Pulse until the tofu and mushrooms are broken up and the ingredients have combined well. While the machine is running, slowly stream in the broth, until the mixture comes together in a ball of dough (4-6 minutes).

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Split the dough into two equal portions, forming each into loaves about 4″x7″. Spray two large sheets of foil with oil/cooking spray. Place one loaf of seitan on each piece of foil, then wrap it up tightly, being sure to seal the ends well. Place in the oven, seam side down, directly on the oven rack in the center of your oven. Bake for 90 minutes, turning the seitan over halfway through the cooking time.

Turn the oven off and allow the seitan to stay in the oven for an additional 30-45 minutes. Remove from the oven and leave wrapped until needed.

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Prepare the sauce: Whisk together all of the ingredients for the barbeque sauce in a saucepan. Turn the heat on to medium, and bring up to a simmer. Let the sauce cook for 20-30 minutes, the turn off the heat.

Preparing “pulled” barbecued seitan: Technically, the seitan is fully cooked at this point. You can slice it as thin or thick as you like, eat it as is, top it with the barbecue sauce (or your favorite sauce), use it as a meat substitute in your preferred dishes…

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When I am making this seitan for us, I use kitchen scissors to cut the cooked seitan into semi-thin slices until the whole log has been chopped up. This gives it an uneven, rough look and creates some pieces that are thicker or thinner than others – which I like for this particular recipe.

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Next, I heat a cast iron stovetop griddle to extremely hot, drizzling it with canola or sunflower oil. When the pan is very hot, I spread the chopped seitan out in a single layer on the griddle. Once the seitan starts crisping and browning, I flip it with a spatula, allowing the second side to crisp up. Spoon about 1/4-cup of barbecue sauce over the seitan, continuously turning it on the griddle until the sauce begins to cook into the seitan. Some places will begin to char, which I encourage (as would be the case with “real” meat barbecue). Add more sauce if you’d like as the seitan is cooking, no more than 1/4-cup at a time. Even as the outside begins to crisp or char, this seitan retains its tenderness.

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Our favorite way to eat this barbecued seitan is as a sandwich on rolls, consisting only of the barbecued seitan, vegenaise, yellow mustard, and a little extra barbecue sauce.

  • Reheating is best done on a stove top griddle or in a hot cast iron pan.
Posted in Dinner, Lunch, Meatless Meat, Meatless Monday, Sauces, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Day to Day Life: Week Fifteen

A look at the last week:

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Our dogwood tree blooms once a year… Guess who bloomed this week?

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When I went in to turn off his bedroom lights, this is how Silas had fallen asleep.

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Maple cinnamon bread certainly requires french toast to be made with it.

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No matter how far from the ocean I get, it’s in my genetic makeup… Always home. This is the Upper Klamath Lake – my husband and I journeyed out that way one morning.

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Vegan polenta with a pesto cashew cream sauce for dinner one evening…

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A stop at Lake Ewauna…

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Which was filled with geese, ducks, and gulls.

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Homemade pad thai one night!

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And vodka gimlets for a few nights…

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Our little apple tree is bustling with honey bees and blooms.

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This guy butterfly came to visit as I was working in our garden. I found him again today, five days later (the flopped over wings tell me it’s probably the same dude). Yet again he sat on my fingertips for a bit.

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This sassy girl watches me closely as I’m working outside.

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This sassy boy, too.

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This little boy is turning 9, two months from today. How did that happen?

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Making breakfast potatoes the night before is perfect for a filling breakfast my husband can simply crisp up for he and the boys in the morning – so I don’t have to get up and cook with my half-asleep-brain.

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It may not look like much, but this space took some hours of work and prepping this week. Along with my sunburn, I created a space ready to be planted. Woo hoo!

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Noisy friend.

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Now that little league has started, we have two games each week, at least. This week’s mid-week game lasted until the sun started setting…

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There are very few things in life that make me feel like such a good hippie: brewing my own jun kombucha and making homemade nut milk.

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I planted a bunch of eggshell starts earlier this week… but tonight when we got home, I found the majority of them strewn all over our back deck. I imagine it was a demise partially due to the wind… and partially due to those two sassy beasts posted earlier… Regardless, I guess I will be starting over this coming week, in containers other than eggshells… because I am not eating almost three dozen eggs to have more shells to plant in…

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SO GOOD.

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My husband and I made an impromptu hike up to Upper Table Rock today. I’ve lived in Ashland for 10 and a half years and had never been… He’s been here twice as long and hadn’t been up there either. The view of this valley was stunning.

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We of course stopped for burritos and margaritas afterwards… because it’s completely necessary, right, after a hike that gains 720 feet in 1.4 miles? (Yes.)

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