Posts Tagged ‘Garlic’

Rose’s GF Curry Pizza

curry pizzaIf you like the flavours of Indian and the convenience of pizza, you’ll love  my recipe for Curry Pizza.

Ingredients:

Bob’s Red Mill Biscuit Mix(+ 1/2 c butter, 6-8 tbs water)

2-3 tbs Pataks Rojan Josh paste

1/4c Pataks sweet Mango Chutney

1/4 c chopped green onions

2 tsp cumin

2 tsp garlic powder

1/2 large beefstake tomato, chopped

1/2 c shredded  mozzarella cheese

3-4 tbs olive oil

Crust: prepare crust according to the directions for pie crust on the back of the biscuit mix package. Roll out and place in a greased 9″ glass pie plate. Cook on 450F for 1 min. Remove from oven and proceed.

Pizza: drizzle the crust with half of the olive oil. Scatter over cumin and garlic salt, then evenly spread over rogan josh paste and chutney. Arrange thin slices of tomato on top and scatter over green onions. Drizzle the remaining oil and top with cheese. Bake another 10 minutes.

Tasty Factor: Great taste. Crust isn’t exactly like pizza but good enough and cuts well. The chutney balances out the spice of the curry.

Poopy Factor: It’s a little sloppy. Some sausage slices might balance it out. The dough was a little difficult to get into the pie plate.

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Rose’s end-of-summer pumpkin stew

It’s the end of summer here in southwestern Pennsylvania and mainly the end of Husband and I’s first official garden. We had a lot of surprises this year; plants popping up where we didn’t plant them, stuff we ‘forgot’ and found itself wrapped around something else halfway through July. In the end some things did great and some, not so good. But for all of our hard work we did end up with a little bounty all our own and that’s all you can ask for.

Pumpkins, carrots, aubergine, tomatoes, green peppers, honeydewmelon, watermelon

Pumpkins, carrots, aubergine, tomatoes, green peppers, honeydewmelon, watermelon

So, my pumpkins were ready to come off of the vine and it’s over a month until Hallowe’en so what could I do with them? Well, I separated and dried the seeds to roast and put away to plant next year. I’m saving one for a pie and the other I split in half. One half I sliced, fried and buttered and served with sausage and the other half I made into a stew. Turned out really nice and I thought  I’d share my throw-together GF recipe with you!

Sweet pumpkin (and baby watermelon) from my garden 2010

Sweet pumpkin (and baby watermelon) from my garden 2010

Rose’s End-of-Summer Pumpkin Stew (amounts are approximate)

1/2 small sweet pumpkin
1 tin low-salt chicken broth
2-3 c water or more
3/4 c. chunky peanut butter
1 green pepper
3 medium red tomatoes
handful chopped green onions w/tops
3 tbs olive oil or more
spices (generous pinch or more to taste): black pepper, cumin, thyme, coriander, garlic powder, nutmeg
sea salt to taste

Garnishes: grated cheddar, sweet chili sauce, soured cream, chopped cilantro

1. Prepare the pumpkin. Slice into large chunks and cook on 350F for 40 min. Let cook and cut away from the rind.
2. Cook pumpkin chunks in chicken broth 1 1/2 hrs, adding up to 3 c. water as needed to cover.
3.Meanwhile, chop 1/2 of the scallions and green pepper into small bits. Cook in olive oil until softened and set aside.
4. Let the pumpkin broth cool a little and liquify in batches in a blender. Return to pot.
5. Chop up tomatoes and rest of the scallions and add, with peppers, to the pot. At this time also add the spices and peanut butter.
6. Cook on low another 20-30 minutes til thickened and blended.

stew made from my garden pumpkin, tomatoes and peppers

stew made from my garden pumpkin, tomatoes and peppers

Serving Suggestions:

1. Serve on rice (we eat brown but basmati would also be very good)
2. Top with a hunk of mozarella and warm under a broiler as you would french onion soup
3. Swirl with soured cream or sweet chili sauce
4. Serve over buttered grits
5. Serve over fried polenta

Tasty Factor: cool colour, nice constistency and flavours aren’t overpowering.

Poopy Factor: takes a while to prepare. You could try tinned pumpkin and throw it together to reduce cooking time to 30 or 40 minutes but then you’d still have a yard full of pumpkins needing to be used up. Your choise!

My spice rack which Jesus and a coke bottle watch over

My spice rack which Jesus and a coke bottle watch over

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Mushrooms in tomato and onion sauce

yummy mummy mushroomsI’m still on my Indian food kick and tonight I made a simple vegetable side dish called Mushrooms in a Rich Tomato and Onion Sauce. Very easy recipe, gluten free and pretty darned tasty. This one is also from Cooking School: Indian from Barnes and Noble.

Mushrooms in a Rich Tomato and Onion Sauce

10 oz (280g) white button mushrooms
4 tbs sunflower or olive oil (I used about half the amount of oil)
1 onion, finely chopped
1 green chili, chopped
2 tsp garlic paste (I used garlic/ginger)
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp ground coriander
1/2 tsp chili powder
1/2 tsp salt, to taste
1 tbs tomato paste (I used 2 tbs tomato sauce)
3 tbs water
1 tsp snipped fresh chives (I used chopped green onion)

Thickly slice the mushrooms.

fry up the onion and chiliHeat the oil in a  pan over medium heat. Add onion and the chili and cook, stirring for 5-6 min til onion is soft but not yet browned. Add the garlic paste and cook, stirring, 2 more minutes.

add some spicesAdd cumin, coriander, chili powder and cook 1 more minute. Add mushrooms, salt and tomato paste and stir til everything is blended.

toss in the vegSprinkle the 3 tbs water evenly over mushrooms and reduce the heat to low. Cover and cook 10 minutes, stirring halfway through. The sauce should have thickened (if not, uncover and cook another 3-4 min to the consistency desired).

Serve w/chives as garnish.

Tasty Rating: Could have been spicier. Great for the likes of Husband who hate spice but for myself, I would have liked to have had a little more hot. This recipe is great on rice.

Poopy Rating: just doesn’t look very nice – but it tastes great!

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Rose’s Jewelled Rice

yummy yummy jewelled riceJewelled Rice is a nice meat accompaniment in eastern recipes but this is my own little variation on it I happened to whip up over the weekend. Hubby had this with sliced bourbon chicken he picked up from Costco.

Rose’s Jewelled Rice for 2

1/2 c short grain brown rice (you can use white or basmati too, just follow package directions for water and cooking times)
1 1/2 c veg or GF chicken broth (NOTE: I make my own vegetable stock- see below for recipe)
3/4 c diced sweet onion (vidalia or red)
3/4 c diced dried fruit (apricots, pineapple, papaya, sultanas- any mix of these works, I used apricots and pineapple)
chopped green onions to serve, GF soya sauce (optional)
sea salt and pepper (optional)

not very complicated :)diced onionsdice apricots and pineapples

Bring the broth to the boil over medium flame in a small pot. Meanwhile, wash the rice and add to the pot with the diced onions. Cover and cook according to time on package, adding water if needed according to the type of rice you are cooking.  Make sure to cook long enough to absorb most of the liquid and stir occasionally to keep from sticking to the bottom of the pot. When you are nearing the last 3-4 minutes of cooking, add the diced fruit and fluff up the rice (season to taste if you wish). Before serving, fluff again and divide between bowls. Top with green onions and a splash of soya sauce.

This particular version of the rice is mild in flavour- use a stronger stock or carmelise your onions first in a little butter before adding to the pot to bring out more flavour.

cook up the riceadd the onions!stir in some fruityummy yummy jewelled rice

Rose’s Vegetable Stock

Vegetable peelings
Water to cover
Dried herbs- rosemary, coriander, seasoned salt, etc

I use fresh veg in cooking quite a lot so I save the peelings and add them to my crockpot on the weekend to make a basic stock for rice dishes. Any savoury veg works- the last batch I made I just put in green onion stalks, the tough bits of a small cabbage and a whole, peeled garlic clove. All I do is add a handful of herbs to this and just cover the veg with water. This is the easiest stock ever and it smells really nice- cook on high for a couple of hours in the crockpot and let it cool in glass jars. I usually forget I’m even cooking it until the smell permeates the whole apartment and it’s done. Can’t get any easier than that!

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Yummy quick broccoli fry

We’re not big meat eaters (neither are we vegetarians) and I spied this quick little recipe on the BBC GoodFood site the other day and decided to try. BBCGoodFood is one of my favourite food magazines. I can skim out the GF recipes for me and practise making the heavy traditional stuff like pork pies and pasties for my husband.

The original recipe for Beef StirFry w/Broccoli and Oyster Sauce is right on the GoodFood site. I, of course, made modifications. If you’re looking to try other recipes on this site or from the magazine (I either get a copy from the library or buy the holiday edition from Barnes and Noble), you’ll need to convert some of the measurements.

ingredients for stir fry

These were my ingredients- nothing really fancy or complicated. I didn’t have a garlic clove laying around so I used powdered and I ommitted the beef. I also substituted fish sauce for the oyster sauce as Wal-Mart didn’t have any gluten free stuff.  Oh heck, let’s face it, I just rearranged this entire recipe!

Since this is fairly easy and tasty fare, I added some sliced mini pepper (so cute! got them at Costco) and green onions instead of a white onion. I just followed the first couple of steps and softened the peppers first before adding the brocolli. Mine was frozen so I adjusted the cooking time a little and added the green onions last.

 

frying the peppers

brown ricealltogether now!There were several suggestions in the comments on this recipe for small substitutions, serving on rice noodles, etc. I served mine over plain brown rice and it was DE-LISH.

finished brocolli stirfry

Tasty factor: thumbs up from me- will try it next time with the meat.

Poopy factor: none (however, husband didn’t try it because it has something ‘evil and green’ in it.)

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