mushrooms

Cabbage Rolls

I've had cabbage rolls on my mind the last couple of weeks, so I finally made them. My mother-in-law makes голубцы (golubtsi) pretty regularly, so I wanted to see how my husband would like my take on these traditional Russian/Ukrainian cabbage rolls. I made a meat version for him and this plant version for myself by using mushrooms and beans in lieu of the meat. 

As a side note, I opened an email today from Taste Cooking and their article It's Difficult to Talk About Soviet Food caught my eye. Naturally, I read the entire thing. At the end, there's a recipe for голубцы including a vegan filling variation that has mushrooms in it. My recipe was not inspired by this one! I read the article after I created mine. (Apparently, I'm not that original.) My train of thought was this: I want to make cabbage rolls...cabbage rolls have meat...what should I replace the meat with...I use mushrooms in my burritos instead of meat...yeah, mushrooms!...and ooh, beans! So, there you have it. 

Ingredients:

2 cups cooked rice (I used long-grain white basmati rice, but you can use any rice you prefer)

12 carrots, grated 

3-4 onions (3 large or 4 medium) finely diced

6 cloves garlic, minced

1 cup tomato sauce (not pasta sauce, just regular tomato sauce in a can)

2 portobello mushrooms (about 3lbs) diced

2 15-oz cans aduki beans, rinsed and drained (or any other beans you prefer)

3 T fresh dill, minced

1 large head of cabbage (I used savoy cabbage, but you can use regular green cabbage as it may be more tender)

2 cups tomato juice or tomato sauce (I used home-canned tomato juice)

salt and pepper to taste

Start by shredding the carrots using the small side of your grater, or use a food processor so you don't get carrot elbow (yes, carrot elbow; it's like tennis elbow but you get it from grating too many carrots). Finely dice the onions. Add a couple tablespoons of oil to a large skillet, then add the carrots and onions. Don't caramelize or brown your onions; just soften the mixture by cooking it down for 20-30 minutes, stirring occasionally (the time goes by quickly when you're prepping your other ingredients). Add minced garlic at any point. 

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While the carrot/onion mixture is cooking, fill a large stockpot with water and bring to a boil. Cut the core out of your head of cabbage and tear (or cut) the leaves off individually. Add the leaves to the water and boil for about 5 minutes or until slightly translucent. Remove leaves from pot, shake off excess water, and let drain on a plate. It's probably a good idea at this point to preheat your oven to 325 degrees.

Return to carrot/onion mixture. Salt and pepper to taste, then add dill and the 1 cup of tomato sauce.

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Remove from heat. In a separate bowl, combine diced portobello mushrooms, beans, rice, and about 3/4 of the carrot/onion mixture. Make sure all of the ingredients are mixed well. This is your filling.   

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Now it's time to wrap the rolls. Take a cabbage leaf and spoon a rectangular-sized blob of filling either in the middle of the leaf or at the pocket of the leaf's base. Fold the sides toward the middle, then roll it up. (If you need a visual, just search the internet for videos on "how to roll a cabbage roll.") 

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Place the cabbage rolls in a single layer in a dutch oven or any other large oven-proof pan. Pour the 2 cups of tomato juice or sauce over the cabbage rolls. Then glob the remaining carrot/onion mixture evenly over the rolls. Cover your pan with the lid or cover tightly with foil and bake for about 30 minutes. 

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Deep Dish Pizza

If you're looking for a simple dish for busy weeknight dinners, this is it. You can make it more complicated by making your own crust, but there's no need. I buy cornmeal pizza crusts in the frozen section at the grocery store, add spaghetti sauce and whatever toppings and seasonings I'm in the mood for. 

Ingredients:

Frozen cornmeal pizza crusts (or any other type of pizza crust)

Spaghetti sauce 

Combination Suggestion #1: mushrooms, frozen (or not so frozen) peas, onions (or quartered pearl onions), smoked salt, and dried ground rosemary.

Combination Suggestion #2: zucchini, bell peppers, onions, fresh basil, and fennel seeds (optional, but adds amazing flavor if you have them on hand). 

Preheat oven to the temperature suggested for your pizza crust. Add spaghetti sauce to the pizza crust shell (be generous; the sauce will keep the veggies from drying as the pizza is baking). Add any toppings and seasonings you'd like; my combinations are just suggestions (albeit very wonderful suggestions). Bake for about 20 minutes or until the crust is perfectly toasted and the veggies are mostly cooked.  

Mushrooms, onions, and peas combination.

Mushrooms, onions, and peas combination.

Zucchini, peppers, onions, and basil combination.

Zucchini, peppers, onions, and basil combination.

Lazy Persian Kotlet

So, last year I attempted to make a vegetarian kotlet recipe from My Persian Kitchen and I left too much liquid in the mixture, so I had no kotlets but some very tasty mashed potatoes. I had some advieh left (which is a very delicious spice blend for Persian cooking) and I wanted to try a version where I didn't blend the ingredients together but kept them whole. I often do this with soup recipes so that I can keep some texture in my food. It turned out very well. (And so much easier too!) 

Go to My Persian Kitchen's recipe for Vegetarian Kotlet and just don't blend the ingredients. If you actually want to make them kotlet-style and keep it plant-based, use a flax egg instead of a regular egg.  

Fancy taters.

Fancy taters.

Advieh, turmeric, and salt on the mash from my previous attempt. It's so pretty!

Advieh, turmeric, and salt on the mash from my previous attempt. It's so pretty!

Vegan Pâté

Vegan Pâté

Vegan Pâté

So, the other day I was recipe-searching online and discovered that there's such thing as vegan pâté (and, yes, I'm gonna spell it that way every time...in case you were wondering). Vegan pâté! Mind blown.

 I started looking for the perfect recipe and I was either missing ingredients, didn't like the combinations of ingredients, or didn't like the texture shown in the pictures. So I just started writing down ingredients that I liked and made my own conglomeration from about seven different recipes.

Ingredients:

2 cups walnuts (soaked for at least 2 hours)

1lb cremini mushrooms (common brown mushrooms)

1/2 large onion

1/4 cup ground flax seeds

3 T fresh parsley

1 T fresh thyme

2 T fresh rosemary

2 T white miso

1 T soy sauce 

2 T lemon juice or apple cider vinegar (whichever one you have on hand is fine)

1 T nutritional yeast

2 T dulse flakes (optional; I just like to throw these into everything)

2 garlic cloves (or 3 or 4 or 10...can you tell I love garlic?) 

salt (to taste)

veggie broth (to help blend)

Soak the walnuts at least 2 hours (I soaked mine overnight), drain, and rinse. Put all the ingredients into a blender. You may have to divide your batch, depending on the size of your blender; alternatively, you can use a food processor but make sure you use a spice grinder for grinding down the flax seeds. Add veggie broth as needed to bring it to the consistency you prefer and to help mix your ingredients, especially if you have a cheap, weak blender like I do. 

You can dip crackers in it or spread it on bread for snacks or breakfast. I got my crackers from Breadfarm at the Everett Farmers Market. I couldn't decide between the two kinds they had, so I did what any reasonable person would do: buy both. I still can't figure out which ones I like best. And, let's be honest, I'm pretty sure I made the pâté as a way to utilize the crackers instead of the other way around. 

 

 

Mushroom Lentil Stew

Mmm...I think I'm ready for fall now.

Mmm...I think I'm ready for fall now.

A first blog post generally requires balloons and confetti, but I’d rather not have to clean up after that garbage so let’s get right to the good stuff. 

Last week the Pacific Northwest suddenly decided it was fall, seemingly overnight, thus deeming it soup weather once again. So, I made one of my old-reliables. 

Ingredients: 

2 pints (approximately) shiitake mushrooms

2 cups red lentils (rinsed thoroughly and drained) 

2 T minced fresh turmeric  

1/2 cup fresh chopped basil

1 can (13.5 oz) coconut cream (preferably with the least ingredients; mine had only coconut and water) 

1-3 cups vegetable stock

salt and pepper to taste  

Peel and mince the turmeric. Add to stockpot with mushrooms, lentils, basil, and coconut cream. Cook until the mushrooms start to get juicy and the coconut cream completely melts. Then dilute with as much vegetable stock as you prefer. You can make it more of a stew with less liquid, or more of a soup by adding more. Salt and pepper to taste. Simmer for about 30 minutes or until lentils are cooked through.

 

A note about the mushrooms: I generally use shiitakes in this recipe because they’re heartier and a nice, meaty mushroom. This time I also used about a cup of blue oysters as well. You can use whatever mushrooms you’d like. This week, I got my mushrooms from Cascadia Mushrooms at the Everett Farmers Market. 

 

Ingredients before being cooked down.

Ingredients before being cooked down.

Blue Oysters. Look at these beauties!

Blue Oysters. Look at these beauties!