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From an interesting interview with Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic:
Jonathan Safran Foer: The question is, if we don’t say no to this, what do we say no to? If we don’t say no to something that systematically abuses 50 billion animals, if we don’t say no to the number-one cause of global causing, and not by a little bit, but by a lot, if we don’t say no to what the UN has said is one of the top two or three causes of every significant environmental problem in the world, locally and globally, if we don’t say no to something that is clearly – not clear to me, but clear to the World Health Organization – a prime factor in the generation of Avian and Swine flus, if we don’t say no to something that’s making our antibiotics less effective and ineffective, if we don’t say no to something that causes 76 million of food-borne illness every year, just what do we say no to? This is not a case where we need to go to war with another country or spend a trillion dollars or elect a new government. We just need to say no to it.
Or at least not like this. Yeah dude!
Sauteed Baby Bok Choy, Garlic and Portobello Mushrooms
I discovered this dish when I lived in San Francisco in the summer of ‘69, I mean, ‘01, as a student on Trinity’s now-defunct San Francisco program, where I stayed in a historic mansion with a live-in chef named James, learned about sixties counterculture (read into that whatever you like), got addicted to Counter-Strike and wrote my final essay about the evil that is Disneyland, after four grueling days of roller coasters, that is.
As nobody knows, San Francisco has an incredible Chinatown, and the restaurants there are probably some of the best on this side of the Pacifico. I used to cruise on my own in those days (ha, not like now, no sirree) and I popped into the most non-descript basement I could find and ordered up a vegetable I’d never heard of. (This was the summer when my vegetarianism became what it is today, which is to say, lacking.)
Bok Choy is Chinese for “cabbage”, which is exactly what it sounds like. Portobello mushrooms are Whole-Foods speak for “bourgeois”, and they even came pre-sliced. Neither of these items could be found in either Japan or Hungary, which is yet more proof of how Obama has saved us all. Garlic comes from heaven, and it can be found in Hungary, where it is called “fokhagyma”, and Japan, where it is referred to as “ninniku”. I don’t know what “nin” means, but “niku” means meat. See what I said about vegetarianism?
We’ll be pairing this dish with unsalted white rice, which is how the Chinese would do it, and we should all begin learning a lot more about China these days. Anyway, the vegetables themselves will not fill you up, so a carbohydrate is necessary. Remember to eat every last grain, or you will be disrespecting the poor farmers who broke their backs planting, harvesting and de-shelling that rice, not to mention carrying it all the way from China to Fresh Pond Circle. Recipe after the jump.
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This week, we rocked at being vegetarians. Why is that, you ask? Well, first of all, we made our own soy milk from scratch! It’s actually not that hard; you just soak a cup of beans overnight, cook them with a teaspoon or two of coconut shavings, until they soften up a bit, and drain, saving the water they were cooked in. Then you blend the one cup beans with one cup fresh water and one cup bean water (which contains hella nutrients), until well pureed. Finally, you run the mixture through a fine strainer, toss it in the fridge, and you’ve got soymilk. The residue kind of sinks to the bottom, so you should shake it up before serving. We used it for cereal and in a spinach stew with great results.
The second reason we rock is related to the soymilk. In the straining process, the soy residue, known as okara (yup, that’s a Japanese word), is left behind. Bursting with protein, fiber, and other good stuff, okara is really too good to just throw out and, as you might have guessed, we used it. Following this recipe, we made okara patties mixed with shredded carrots, parsely root, onion and scallions, and spiced them with curry, cumin, koriander and salt and veggie stock. Cooking was a little more involved, as we had to sautee the veggies and okara separately, then mix the two together and add 2-3 tablespoons of flour to tighten up the mixture before making the patties and baking them for about 30 minutes. But they turned out delicious! Served ‘em with some rice and tomatoes, and dabbed a little sour cream on top. Skills.
As I finally put to rest my long-overdue fifth Flash project and some other things that had been hanging over my head, I made E a quiche I had promised since our trip to Paris a month ago. It came out pretty well, but the crust was a little over done and I think I’d change the seasoning next time. Recipe is as follows:
2 cups brown rice (cooked) 1 cup bread crumbs 4-5 tablespoons oil herbs (basil, parsley) 6 eggs 1 cup milk 1 package frozen spinach, thawed and drained (duh) 1 packet smoked salmon 2/3 of an onion, chopped 3 small garlic cloves, finely chopped a bunch of grated cheese
Mix cooked rice, breadcrumbs, 1 egg and 1-2 tbsp oil in a bowl. Spread mixture onto the bottom and sides of a greased baking plate. Put in a medium oven for about 10 minutes.
Sautee the onions and garlic in a little oil until lightly brown. Lightly mix the 5 eggs and milk and then add the onions, spinach, cheese (save a little for the top) and salmon until well mixed. Add the mixture to the cooking plate and cook about 20 minutes or until firm. Turn off heat, sprinkle leftover cheese on top and leave in oven to kick it while you set the table. Serve immediately.
Hungarian Spinach Stew ingredients: 0.5 kg spinach, oil, flower, 1 slice of garlic, salt, pepper, vegeta (soon on the way!)
if you can buy fresh spinach: - wash the spinach, boil it in little water to make it shrink (really just a little, like 1,5 cups), stir and drain - you could use a mixer or just cut it in tiny pieces with a knife on a board (the goal is to get a kinda mashed pile of spinach) if you only have frozen spinach (one pack is usu. 450 grams, mash), let it thaw
1. heat 2-3 spoons (soup spoon) of oil in a saucepan, make raux (spelling??) with 2-3 spoons flower, stir well on lower heat and add mashed garlic, make it brown 2. add mashed spinach and preferrably some of the water that you cooked it in (quarter of a cup) and 1 cup milk – I give you in EU measurement 2 deciliter i.e. 200 mililiter. add seasoning 3. boil it once and it’s ready. you can serve it with boiled potatoes (cut it squares) and sunny side up or hard-boiled EEEGGS
Tip: first use less milk and if it seems to thick, you can still add more. but you don’t want it to be soup-like…
Japanese Dolls’ Festival Rice ingredients: 3/4 cup uncooked rice and 3/5 cup water per serving, red beans, mirin, salt, seasoning packet
cook the rice and beans in the water until the rice cooker timer goes off, mix in mirin and salt, garnish with seasoning and serve.