on one of my many “work is canceled because of snow” days this winter, the activity i picked to do was to make homemade pasta. but why just make normal homemade noodles, let’s get creative folks. my decision to spice it up a bit was to add lots of ginger to my dough. the plan…..to create noodles that would go well with stir fry or any other asian dish i create. noodles were made, bagged and frozen. now it was time to use them. sweet and sour crispy tofu i thought would be a good dish to try with the noodles. i wanted to actually taste that ginger. i also made up a batch of steph’s cashew rangoon, although i substituted cashews for sun-dried tomatoes, and meatless monday was served. it was yum, no doubt, but next time more ginger is going into that dough.
Peep that cupcake…
I saw this in a magazine last year and decided to make it — needless to say it was a little past Easter when I finally got around to Peeping up some cupcakes (but you know Peeps, they keep for, oh, eternity). I’m not a huge Peep fan, in fact, I’d say I am a mild Peep fan. However, the second it’s added to a cupcake, I’m all in. The cute factor just gets me…
These were Lemon cupcakes with homemade chocolate frosting. I loved the idea of the citrus and chocolate and the lemon with the yellow Peep. All you do is make any cupcake you are craving, ice it like normal and then, drumroll please….you stick the Peep on top. It totally stays! I call that Peep-tastic! I did add little chocolate chips around the Peep to make a subtle nest, but you could go all out and add coconut shavings or other nest like edibles.
The Official Hearty Eaters Food Club! Food that warms our bellies….
Several months ago I decided that I missed talking about food. I know that seems impossible, all I do is post about food, write food novels, and go to cooking school- but the truth is I rarely spend entire meal mostly talking about loving food. I remembered in the sixth grade, spending the night with my best friend and talking for hours about all the different kinds of candy we couldn’t wait to eat again (Hot Tamales, Reeses Peanut Butter Cups, Twix, Snickers, Butterfingers...) My 11-year-old foodie was looking to relive that yummy feeling– so voila! The Official Hearty Eaters Food Club was born.
Our first feast was in February and the theme was “food that warms your belly.” It was a long lunch filled with restaurant recommendations, recipe ideas, mouth-watering food suggestions, and amazing potluck dishes. Below are pictures of the spread and recipes from the hearty eaters! Our spring feast will be coming up soon.I can’t wait talk about sugar snap peas….MAN, I just love those nasty, sweet, green little guys….
Orange Wheels/Santre de Chakle
Prep time: 10 minutes, plus chilling
6 oranges
1/4 cup honey
Handful of Craisins
Generous sprinkling of cinnamon
1 1/2 tablespoons rose water
2 tablespoons orange juice
2 tablespoons Grand Marnier or other orange liqueur
Peel oranges. Slice each one into 4 or 5 rounds. Sprinkle with Craisins. Sprinkle with cinnamon or go crazy and use cloves. Mix honey, orange juice and Grand Marnier. Pour over oranges and chill for at least two hours. Serve chilled with juice.
Baked Brie in Pastry
One package of Brie- any size or shape. Wheel or slice.
One package pepperidge farm puff pastry sheets.(in freezer dept)
Choose the amount of puff pastry sheet you will need from package. I soften in microwave in 15 sec increments so I can tear away the pieces I need. One reg wheel can take two pieces. Take pieces and wrap Brie up with them.
Preheat oven to 400. Cook on baking sheet (can lightly grease area where you place Brie to avoid sticking to sheet) for approximately 20 min. Watch for pastry to turn crispy golden brown.
Creamless Creamy Tomato Soup
From The Complete America’s Test Kitchen TV Show Cookbook
Serves 6
¼ extra virgin olive oil, plus extra for drizzling
1 medium onion, chopped medium
3 medium garlic cloves, minced or pressed (about 1 tablespoon)
Pinch red pepper flakes (optional)
1 bay leaf
2 (28oz) cans whole tomatoes
3 slices high quality white sandwich bread, crusts removed, torn into 1 inch pieces
1 tablespoon brown sugar
2 cups low sodium chicken broth
2 tablespoon brandy (optional)
Salt and pepper to taste
¼ cup chopped fresh chives
- Heat 2 tablespoon of the oil in a large Dutch oven over medium high heat until shimmering. Add the onion, garlic, red pepper flakes (if using), and bay leaf. Cook stirring frequently, until the onion is translucent, 3 to 5 minutes. Stir in the tomatoes with their juice. Using a potato masher, mash until no pieces bigger than 2 inches remain. Stir in the bread and sugar and bring the soup to a boil. Reduce the heat to medium and cook, stirring occasionally, until the bread is completely saturated and starts to break down, about 5 minutes. Remove and discard the bay leaf.
- Transfer half of the soup to a blender. Add 1 tablespoon of oil and process until the soup is smooth and creamy. Transfer to a large bowl and repeat with the remaining soup and the remaining 1 tablespoon of oil. Rinse and dry the Dutch oven and return the soup to the pot. Stir in the chicken broth and brandy (if using). Return the soup to a boil and season with salt and pepper to taste. Ladle the soup into bowls, sprinkle with the chopped chives, drizzle with olive oil and serve. (The soup, minus the garnish, can be refrigerated in an airtight container for up to 2 days. Warm over low heat until hot, do not boil)
COOKIE DOUGH DIP (from chocolatecoveredkatie.com)
Healthy Cookie Dough Dip
1 1/2 cups chickpeas or white beans (1 can, drained and rinsed very well) (250g after draining)
1/8 tsp plus 1/16 tsp salt
tiny bit over 1/8 tsp baking soda
2 tsp pure vanilla extract
1/4 cup nut butter of choice (You can get away with using only 3 tbsp. If you use peanut butter, it’ll have a slight “pb cookie dough” taste, so if you don’t want this, use a different nut butter –(Evie’s note: I whoosh up some walnuts in my food processor before I blend the dip and make walnut butter)
up to 1/4 cup milk of choice, only if needed
Sweetener of choice (see note below, for amount)
1/3 cup chocolate chips
2 to 3 tbsp oats (Evie’s note: I use ground flax)
Add all ingredients (except for chocolate chips) to a good food processor (not blender), and blend until very smooth. Then mix in the chocolate chips.
If made correctly and blended long enough, this should have the exact texture of real cookie dough!
Sweetener Notes: I used 2/3 cup brown sugar when I first made this for the party. Liquid sweeteners (agave, maple, etc.) are fine as well, as is evaporated cane juice. You can easily get away with less sugar– some people will be perfectly fine with just 3 tbsp for the whole recipe! And if you don’t want any sugar, you can also use stevia, if you like the taste of stevia-sweetened desserts. Try 2-3 packets of NuNaturals stevia, and add more sweetener if needed. I wouldn’t recommend serving an all-stevia version to party guests, though.
Tomatoey Butter Beans
4 servings
2 TBSP Olive Oil
1 Large onion, sliced
2 Garlic cloves, diced
1 TBSP tomato paste
2 Cups of chopped tomatoes (sometimes I use three…just sayin)
1LB Large Butter Beans/lima beans (dried or canned– if dried, soak overnight before cooking)
Heat the oil in a pan over a gentle heat. Add the onion and garlic, cook for 10 mins until very soft and turning golden. Add the tomatoes, beans and paste. Sinner for 20 mins, adding a little more water (or red wine, or more tomatoes) if it gets too dry. Serve with crusty toast!
Black Eyed Pea Curry with Collards and Potatoes
(from: http://www.theppk.com/2014/01/black-eyed-pea-curry-with-collards-potatoes/)
1 tablespoon coconut oil
1 large red onion, thinly sliced
2 jalapenos, seeded and thinly sliced
1 tablespoon fresh minced ginger
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 1/2 to 2 tablespoons mild curry powder
1/2 teaspoon garam masala
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon agave
3 cups vegetable broth
2 tablespoons tomato paste
1 1/2 lbs red potatoes, in 3/4 inch pieces
1 lb collards, rough stems removed, leaves chopped into bite sized pieces
1 cup coconut milk
1 1/2 cups cooked black eyed peas (from a 15 oz can, rinsed and drained)
To serve: Basmati rice
Optional garnish: Fresh chopped cilantro
Preheat a 4 quart pot over medium heat. Saute the onion and jalapeno in the coconut oil for 5 to 7 minutes, until onion is lightly browned.
Add the garlic and ginger, and saute until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add 1 1/2 tablespoons of curry powder, garam masala, salt, vegetable broth, agave, and tomato paste, and stir. The tomato paste may not dissolve just yet but that’s ok, it will when it heats through.
Add the potatoes, cover pot and bring to a boil. Once boiling, immediately lower heat to a simmer, and leave the lid ajar so that steam can escape. Let potatoes cook just until tender, about 5 more minutes.
Once potatoes are fork tender, add the collards, black-eyed peas and coconut milk. Stir gently to incorporate. Leave lid ajar again, and bring to a simmer. Let simmer just until collards are tender, it should only take a few minutes.
Turn off heat and taste for salt and spices. Add remaining curry powder if needed. It tastes best if you let it sit for 10 minutes or so, but if you can’t wait then just dig in!
Serve over basmati rice.
Nothing beats homemade mac and cheese!
Can’t wait to nibble again soon!
meatless monday — personal pan pizza
its funny when you develop a food allergy what you end up missing that you can’t eat any more. pizza is a big one for me. yes i can make my own but i miss that frozen take and bake pizza, the ability to just order a pizza and have someone else do all the work, and the big thing have cheese that actually melts on the pizza. there are a few dairy-free frozen pizzas but honestly i have a hard time paying $10 for it and then when it says “cheese melts!” it never really melts just kind of warms up. this led me to an experiment, making my own personal pan pizzas that i freeze and then bake as i want them. i made up a batch of my whole-wheat honey pizza crust, which got me about 3, 6 inch pizzas, topped them with pizza sauce and several dairy-free cheeses, this i find is the key to get any sort of “melting” quality out of those cheeses. i decided to just stick with cheese pizza till i saw how well this whole experiment worked, and i also figured i could always add other toppings as i pulled them out of the freezer. that night however i baked one up for my meatless monday dinner. i made a marghertia pizza that fulfilled my pizza craving. now i love the idea that in my freezer are ready to be baked homemade pizzas that are just calling for future meatless monday dinners!
meatless monday — its a wee bit of Ireland!
St. Pat’s day fell on meatless monday this year. it was also the last day of my dad’s part-time retirement job. that meant a fantastic feast needed to be made. on the menu: homemade vegetable pot pies, carrots, homemade irish soda bread, vegetarian scotch eggs, and of course irish ale to drink. the parents came over for the dinner. i kept some of the ingredients secret such as the radishes ( mom does not like) in the pot pie and the vegetarian sausage (dad would have preferred real meat) in the scotch egg. i wanted them to eat the food and see if they liked it before they found out what the official ingredients were. and the end result?……..clean plates all around!
RECIPE: VEGETARIAN SCOTCH EGG
6 hard boiled eggs
1 12 oz package of vegetarian breakfast sausage
1 cup plain bread crumbs
1 cup vegetable oil
* heat oil in a saucepan over medium to medium-high heat
* make 6 balls out of the sausage, roll them out till they form a thin pancake
*fold the flattened sausage around the hardboiled egg, cover the entire egg, pat it well so it is secure
*roll the sausaged egg in the bread crumbs till all the sausage is covered
*once the egg has been bread crumbed place it in the hot oil, turn the egg so all the bread crumbs become a dark brown
*allow eggs to cool to room temp, put on some irish music and serve with spicy mustard
My favorite food from last week- My Love is a Heart-shaped Pizza
Every year John and I get a heart-shaped pizza during Valentine’s week. This year we hit a pizza roadblock- our usual place we ordered them from wasn’t offering them anymore.
What to do? I spent all week googling and found a few other options, but they all had a snag- one only had pepperoni and the other did have a convenient location.
So I just decided to make my own. Our Whole Foods has fantastic dough in the freezer and fresh sections. I buy it a lot. So instead of making our usual Friday night circle, I put a few strategic dents in the dough and made a heart.
I’ve found that getting my dough back to room temperature really helps with the shaping. I’ll just crack the lid and let it sit on the counter for an hour or more. JY had all cheese on his half and I had grilled pineapple, green peppers and Italian marinated beans (it’s good!!) on mine.
True love is the good kind of cheesy.
From grits to donuts, it’s a work food smorgasbord!

So, I’m part of this new-ish team at work and for one of our first meetings, we were all asked to bring a food that represented us and the “why” story behind it.
I thought, okay, the odds are good that a few people will bring something and then reluctantly tell a story. Boy, was I wrong. Everyone brought something. It was the biggest work feast I’ve seen in a long time AND people took the stories pretty seriously.
Now when I run into people I’m going to always associate them with cinnamon Pop Tarts, or French crepes, or salsa….Ah, food- you are the great connector.
What did I bring? I debated this. Pie is an obvious choice. My life has become about pie, that’s for sure. A pot of British Tea was my go-to if all else failed. I do love my tea. Then the meeting got snowed out and moved to a Thursday, so the fates told me what food represented me best…
I am the pancake and the pancake is me.
meatless monday: black bean, spinach and avocado enchiladas
with my various food allergies i’ve come to deem certain menu items as safe and or uncomplicated. for mexican food the easiest thing for me to alter is tacos but oh how i miss the ohey goey ness of enchiladas. so why not make them for meatless monday. i stuffed mine with refried black beans, fresh avocado slices and fresh spinach, made up a side of peach salsa mexican rice and who needs to go out for mexican food any more…not me!
requested bread recipes
keeping up with my new years resolution of working through the bread bible one recipe/week i’ve gotten a few requests for recipes from my instagram followers so here you go……
all recipes come from the bread bible by christine ingram and jennie shapter
COTTAGE LOAF
6 cups white bread flour
2 tsp salt
one package yeast
1 2/3 cups warm water
1. lightly sprinkle yeast package evenly over your measuring cup of warm water, allow to sit
2. preheat oven to 425 F
3. sift together salt and flour, form a well in the middle of your flour, pour in water and yeast mixture
4. mix flour and water together till forms a dough, knead the dough on a lightly floured surface for 8-10 minutes, place in an oiled boil and cover with oiled plastic wrap, leave to raise for 1 hour or until doubled in size
5. knock back dough and knead for 2-3 minutes, divide dough into to balls one large and one small
6. place the dough balls on lightly greased cookie sheets, place bowls over the top, allow to rise 30 minutes
7. gently flatten the top of the larger dough ball, with a sharp knife cut a cross in the top centre of the dough, brush with water and place the smaller ball on top
8. press a hole in the top of the small dough ball, lightly cut niches ever few inches around the dough balls for decorative edges, cover with oiled plastic wrap allow to sit 10 minutes
9. bake for 35-40 minutes until golden brown
WELSH CLAY POT LOAVES
2 small flower pots – seasoned
1 cup wholewheat flour
3 cups white bread flour
1 1/2 tsp salt
1 package of yeast
2/3 cup warm milk
1/2 cup warm water
4 tbsp melted butter
1 tbsp chopped chives
1 tbsp parsley flakes
1 tsp sage
1 garlic clove — minced
fennel seeds for sprinkling
1. to season flower pots, clean pots, coat them with oil inside and out and bake for 35-40 minutes at 400, allow to cool once seasoned
2. sprinkle evenly the yeast package over the top of the warm milk, allow to sit. sift together flours and salt, make a well in the center of the flour. pour yeast-milk mixture into flour, evenly mix and allow to sit for 15 minutes
3. mix together butter and herbs. add water and butter-herb mixture to the flour mixture. mix till a dough forms. knead dough for 8-10 minutes.
4. place dough in an oiled bowl with oiled plastic wrap on top allow to rise for 1-1 1/2 hours or until doubled in size
5. knock back dough, divide into 2 balls and place each dough ball in an oiled flower pot, allow dough to rise to top of the flower pot, about 30-40 minutes
6. brush top of dough with water and sprinkle fennel seeds on, bake for 35-40 minutes 400 F or until golden brown
meatless monday: beans and quinoa
in grad school one of my stables for dinner was beans and rice. for meatless monday i thought i’d jazz that concept up with a little twist…. instead of rice i’d use quinoa, instead of black beans i’d use white beans. i seasoned the beans and quinoa with nutritional yeast, onions, and some garlic. to top it off a few boca veggie chunks, an old school favorite with a more grown-up twist. i also toasted up some of my homemade cheddar-onion bread and treated myself to a free state beer. ah mondays don’t get much better than that!





















