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Fall Spiced Banana Bread

October 2, 2021 Colleen Stem
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I am not going to call a spice mixture pumpkin spice when there is no freaking pumpkin involved in the spice at all. If there is in fact some pumpkin in the whatever you are eating and or drinking, well then sure. But people need to stop referring to things as pumpkin spice if the pumpkin is not there. It is very misleading and it drives me nuts.

Sorry (not sorry) if you disagree, but friend, you know I am right.

With that said, I offer you a warm fall spiced (because there is no pumpkin here) banana bread. It is your basic, fantastic, banana-y bread with a good kick of warm fall spices to make it just a tad more fantastic. A loaf to celebrate the cool and cozy season to come. And a great way to use up all the bananas that we (me) might have forgotten were in the fridge.

And really, who doesn't want to turn on the oven now that it is a bit chilly these days, no? Banana bread will keep you warm while baking and make your house smell amazing. Win win win!! (Third win is because you get to eat banana bread.)

Now to the spiced banana bread!

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The stuff. Really ripe bananas, flour, baking powder and soda, salt, brown sugar, oil, apple cider vinegar, an spices. Cinnamon, clove, nutmeg, ginger, allspice, and a touch or black pepper.

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Banana bread basics. Mash bananas in a big bowl until a small chunky goop. Add in sugar, oil and vinegar and mix until combined. Whisk together the dry ingredients in a small separate bowl then add to the wet. Gently fold the dry into the wet until the mixture is completely incorporated but then stop, do not over-mix.

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Pour batter into a well greased loaf pan and sprinkle the tip with sugar then pop that bad boy into the oven to bake. After about an hour, once it loos all nice and dark brown and a tester comes out clean, remove pan from oven. Let cool a minutes then pop the bread from pan and place on a wire rack to cool for a little bit.

Once cooled (or cooled enough), slice it up and eat it. Make sure the slices are nice and thick, then pour yourself a hot drink (I recommend coffee or strong black tea) and go sit someplace warm and cosy and enjoy yourself a nice fall moment.

-C


Fall Spiced Banana Bread

makes 1 loaf

  • 2 cups all purpose flour

  • 1 teaspoon baking soda

  • 1 teaspoon baking powder

  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

  • 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg*

  • 1/4 teaspoon clove*

  • 1 teaspoon ground ginger*

  • 1 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon*

  • 1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper *

  • 1/4 teaspoon allspice*

  • 4 very ripe bananas (about 2 cup mashed banana)

  • 3/4 cup packed brown sugar

  • 1/2 cup neutral oil

  • 2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar

  • 1 tablespoon raw or brown sugar (to sprinkle on top. Optional)

*Note. If you already have a spice blend like pumpkin spice, you can just use a tablespoon of that.

Preheat oven to 375.

Grab a big bowl and throw in unpeeled bananas. With a fork or potato masher, mash bananas up until kinda smooth (some chunks are good). Add in brown sugar, oil, and vinegar and mix together. Add flour, baking powder and soda, salt, and all the spices into a separate bowl and whisk together. Then gently fold the dry mixture into the wet until completely combined but do not over mix.

Pour batter into a well greased loaf pan then sprinkle the top with raw or brown sugar (optional). Place pan in oven and bake for 55- 60 minutes or until the top is a deep golden brown and when a test poke comes out clean.

Remove pan form oven and carefully remove bread from loaf pan. Place on a wire rack to cool for at least 15-20 minutes before cutting into it, but when you do, cut thick slices and eat warm or cold or whatever.

Store bread at room tepature in a airtight container for 3-4 days or in fridge for a week. Individual pieces can be wrapped and frozen as well, but you probably will just eat it all before that needs to happen.

In bread, sweet breads and muffins, Vegan Tags Fall Spiced Banana Bread, plant based, spices, pumpkin spice, vegan, dairy free, banana, sweet bread, quick bread, fall, dessert, snack, breakfast, fruit
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Just Freeze the Tomatoes

September 11, 2021 Colleen Stem
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Do you have a shit ton of tomatoes? Do you not have the capacity in you body to eat them all fresh or the will or desire or time to can them but really want to save some tomatoes for later? Well you know you can just freeze them right?

Yup. You don’t have to do anything fancy, pretty much anything at all. Just wash, remove any green stuff, then pop the whole tomatoes (any variety, large or small and tomatillos for that matter. Just remove the papery skin.) into a freezer bag or airtight freezer container and stick in the freezer. That is it.

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Then all winter long (or until you run out) you will have peak summer tomatoes right there ready to be dropped into soup, roasted into deliciousness , simmered into a thick and luscious sauce, or do whatever the heck you usually do with tomatoes besides eating them fresh. I mean, you can even eat them frozen too. Not a bad little snack if I do say so myself.

Happy tomato-ing!

-C

In kitchen tips, Vegetables, Vegan, fruit, summer Tags tomatoes, freeze tomatoes, canning, no can, summer, produce, vegetable, fruit, easy, no waste
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Sweet Corn and Blueberry Cake with Lemon Blueberry Glaze

September 4, 2021 Colleen Stem
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Do you really need a reason to make cake other then you want cake or you just want to bake something? Nope. Cake is a anytime event. Make it when you want it, or like me, want to not think about anything other than that. Making cake.

This cake. Made it with what I have too much of at the moment, which is corn. And while I love fresh corn on the cob, I, as one person, cannot eat the 12 ears that I have been getting weekly at farm share. So besides trying to eat as much of it myself, (the mr won’t eat corn on the cob and the little haven’t been over in a bit cause they are sick) so I give it to people or I make it into things, like cake.

Add in blueberries and a bright pinkish purple lemony glaze and you got yourself a cake that is all sorts of delicious. Fresh corn makes itself known without being overly corny. The blueberries are, as always, right there to taste like a good berry should. Then it’s topped with a nice bright lemony blueberry glaze. A cake fit for a party or a bbq or a good old sit on the back porch while hiding from the world while eating cake, type of cake. Eat it for breakfast, eat it for lunch, eat it whenever the heck you want because, well because you can. And should.

Now to the cake!

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The stuff. Fresh corn and frozen but thawed blueberries. Flour, baking soda and powder, salt, and cornmeal. Oil, plant milk, sugar, and apple cider vinegar. And lastly powdered sugar, a little plant butter, and a lemon.

Start by cutting the corn off the cob.

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Dump corn and milk into a pot. Bring to a boil then cook for a few minutes. Let cool for minute then puree the mixture. It might be slightly chunky but thats all good.

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Pour warm corm mixture into a bowl with the oil, sugar and vinegar. Mix until combined.

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In a large bowl mix together all the dry ingredients. Toss in the blueberries and coat with the mixture then fold in the wet mixture until everything is incorporated.

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Pour batter into a well greased bundt pan and pop into the hot oven.

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After 45-50 minutes it be done. Once cooled enough to handle, pop cake out of tine and place on a wire rack to cool.

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In the meantime make the glaze. Powdered sugar, zest of the lemon, and a little of the juice left over from the defrosted blueberries. Mix until completely combined and the glaze is pourable but not too thin.

Once cake is cooled, pour on the glaze. And yes, you want to you it to drip down the sides cause it looks cool.

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And then you eat the cake.

-C


Sweet Corn and Blueberry Cake with Lemon BLueberry glaze

makes a bundt cake

The cake

  • 2-3 cobs of fresh corn (2 cups corn kernels)

  • 2 cups all purpose flour

  • 1/2 cup cornmeal

  • 1 cup plant milk

  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

  • 1 teaspoon baking powder

  • 1 teaspoon baking soda

  • 1/2 cup neutral oil

  • 3/4 cups white sugar

  • 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar

  • 1 cup frozen and thawed and stained blueberries (reserve the juice)

    the glaze

  • 1 1/4 cup powdered sugar

  • 1tablespoon vegan butter

  • zest from a lemon

  • juice left from frozen blueberries

Preheat oven to 375

Remove corn kernels from cobs until you have 2 full cups. Place corn into a pot with the milk and bring to a boil, reduce heat to medium and cook for about5 minutes. Turn heat off and let cool a few minutes then either pour mixture into a blender or use as hand blender and blend until semi smooth.

In a medium bowl mix the sugar, oil, vinegar, and warn corn mixture together until completely incorporated.

In a large bowl mix together all the dry ingredients. Toss the drained blueberries into the dry mixture until covered then pour and fold in the wet mixture until everything is just incorporated. Do not over mix!

Grease a 10-12 inch bundt pan then pour mixture in. Level it out with a spatula the n pop the bundt into the oven to bake for about 45-50 minute or until a nice deep golden brown and when poked with a tester, it comes out clean. Once bakes, remove from oven, let cool enough to handle, then pop cake from bundt tin and place on a wire rack to cool.

In the meantime make the glaze. Mix together the soft butter, powdered sugar, zest from the lemon, and a tablespoon or two of the blueberry juice until completely combined and is of a pourable, but not to thin consistency. It too thin, add a little more powdered sugar. Too thick, a little more blueberry juice.

Once cake is cooled, drizzle the glaze all over the top, letting it drip down the sided.

And that is that, You eat it now.

Store left overs in airtight container or cake dish for 3-4 days at room temperature. If it is busting hot out, maybe stick in the fridge.

In cake, Vegan Tags Sweet Corn And Blueberry Cake With Lemon BLueberry Glaze, plant based, corn, blueberry, cake, bundt, summer, vegan, dessert, food, recipe, fresh, local
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Tomato Basil and White Bean Orzo Pasta Salad

August 28, 2021 Colleen Stem
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Another heatwave. I tell you what, If I never live through another 90 + degree day, it will be too soon.

What to eat during a heat wave? Well maybe you don’t care and have air conditioning in your kitchen so you cook whatever. I don’t have air conditioning and after a few days of boiling temps, there is no freaking way I am turning on the oven. I can barely turn on the stove top to boil water, but I did, I boiled water, I just did it early in the morning before the temperatures starting rising again. (A pro tip for you.) That is one of the great things about pasta salad, you can make the pasta ahead of time. You can even make the whole salad in the morning and then you don’t have to do a damn thing when it comes to dinner besides lifting a fork to your face, which I know can be a feat when all you want to do is melt, or slap at something, but still.

This pasta salad, well it is not you everyday pasta salad. It has beans, fresh basil, and a dressing that is made by blending up the most delicious seasonal tomatoes until rich and creamy and dumped all over the orzos. . It is probably going to be the best tasting pasta salad you will ever eat. The thing is, you really need to make it soon because sure you can get tomatoes all year round but don’t do that. Do yourself a favor and make it now while the tomatoes are plentiful and at their peak of deliciousness. And also you don’t have wait for a heatwave to make it. This is a good meal to have at the ready all throughout tomato season, and just in case, a heat wave.

Now to the pasta salad!

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The stuff. Just picked tomatoes, some fresh basil, cooked navy beans, orzo pasta, olive oil, red wine vinegar, garlic, and salt and pepper.

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Rough chop tomatoes into small pieces. Also peel and dice garlic into small pieces.

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Place the tomatoes, garlic, and a good pinch of salt into a blender (I used a hand blender) and blend unit smooth. Add in the vinegar and oil and bend until the mixture starts to emulsify and becomes smooth and creamy.

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Cook and strain pasta as instructed. Keep in on the al dente side.

Chop up basil into thin ribbons or whatever.

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Then dump pasta into a large bowl. Add in cherry tomatoes ( I cut mine in half) and beans. Dump in half the sauce and mix around then mix in the chopped basil.

If you are eating it right away, add in the rest of the sauce. If you are keeping it for later, place pasta and sauce in fridge and a before you are planning on serving it mix in the remaining sauce.

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Looks so good right! Season with salt and pepper to taste and then you know…

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Grab a bowl and eat it. Probably should grab a from too, eating this with your hands might get messy.

Stay cool friends!

-C


Tomato Basil and White Bean Orzo Pasta Salad

serves 2-3 as a meal or more as a side

  • 2 cups dried orzo pasta (12 oz)

  • 2 large heirloom tomatoes (about 2 cups chopped)

  • 1 1/2 cups cherry tomatoes (or chopped tomatoes)

  • 1/3 cup olive oil

  • 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar

  • 1 1/2 cups cooked and drained white beans ( I used navy but any white bean will do)

  • 1 cup packed basil leaves

  • 2 cloves garlic

  • salt and pepper

Start with making the tomato dressing. Rough chop the 2 large tomatoes into smaller pieces and peel and chop garlic. Place the tomatoes in a blender (or a large jar if using a hand blender) with the garlic and a good pinch of salt and a little pepper. Blend until smooth. Add in the vinegar and oil and continue to blend until the mixture becomes thick and creamy. Taste and add more salt and pepper if needed .

Prepare orzo pasta as instructed on package (make it al dente)

Grab basil and chop into smaller pieces.

Once orzo is cooked and drained, dump it into a large bowl. Add in the beans and cherry tomatoes (slice in half if they are on the large size) and pour in half if the tomato sauce. Mix unit incorporated. Toss in the basil.

Now if you are going to eat right away mix in remaining sauce. If you plan on refrigerating and eating later, save the remaining half of the sauce and mix it in right before serving.

Store left overs in fridge for up to 5 days.

In beans, dinner, quick and easy, salad, side dish, summer, Vegan Tags Tomato Basil and White Bean Orzo Pasta Salad, tomatoes, summer, heirloom, vegan, salad, pasta, easy, make ahead, heat wave, fresh, basil, no bake, beans, plant based, pulses, healthy, bbq, orzo
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Pear Cobbler

August 21, 2021 Colleen Stem
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My neighbor has a couple pear trees and every year, for a few weeks in August, every time I pass his house (I walk by it like 5 times a day) he jumps out at me asking if want some pears. I always say yes, even if it is just one or two. How can I pass up free pears?

The last batch of pears I got from him were a little on the meh side, like at the point were you wouldn’t really enjoy eating them raw but are still good for baking which is fine by me and the reason I made a cobbler. Well that and the mr asked me to. (#1 girlfriend here!)

So here is it. A pretty basic pear cobbler which is to say a pretty fantastic pear cobbler. It is like a pear pie but with a biscuity top instead of a pie crust. And thats it, nothing fancy, just straight up pear goodness.

You know you want it so just make it.

Now to the cobbler.

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The stuff. Pears, flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, plant milk, oil, noise sugar, cinnamon and alittle more flour, apple cider vinegar, and little plant butter.

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clean, core, and slice up pears.not to small and roughly the same size.

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Butter a baking, dump in the pears and toss with sugar, cinnamon, and a little flour. Place in oven while preheating to start the pears cooking.

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Now biscuits. Mix all the dry together then add in the oil and milk, Gently fold just until the wet and dry are incorporated . Place mixture in fridge while pears cook.

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Once the oven is preheated and the pears have had a time to cook a bit, grab the cold biscuit dough from fridge and carefully grab the pears from the oven.

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Drop biscuit dough on top of the hot pears, sprinkle with the raw sugar, and pop it the whole shebang back into the oven for another half hour or so.

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Out of the oven looking all fine and shit.

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And the you eat it.


Pear Cobbler

serves 6ish people

For filling

  • 4 large or 6-7 smaller pears

  • 1/4 cup brown sugar

  • 1 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

  • pinch salt

  • 2 teaspoons flour

  • 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar

  • 1 teaspoon vegan butter (to grease pan)

    for biscuits

  • 1 3/4 cups all purpose flour

  • 2 teaspoon baking powder

  • 3 tablespoons white sugar

  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

  • 1/3 cup neutral oil (or olive if you want)

  • 2/3 cup of plant milk

  • 1 tablespoon raw sugar

Clea, core and slice up pears. Grease a square ( 8x8 or a little larger) baking pan with the butter and dump the pears in. Add the vinegar , brown sugar, 2 teaspoons flor, and the cinnamon into the pan and toss around until the pears all all coated. Place the pan into the oven and start to preheat to 425 degrees.

Once pears are in oven, make biscuits. Mix all the dry together then add in the oil and milk. Gently fold the wet with dry just until incorporated (don’t over mix or they will be tough). Place dough in fridge,

One oven is preheated, let pears cook for about another 8ish minutes the carefully remove pan from oven. Grab biscuit dough from fridge and carefully drop clumps of dough on top of hot pears. Sprinkle with the raw sugar n then pop pan back into oven, redoing heat to 400.

Bake for 30-35 minutes or until biscuits are a nice deep golden brown.

Remove from oven, let cool far a few minutes, then dig in.

Left overs can be stored in the fridge, covered, for a few days and eaten cold or reheated.

In biscuits and such, cobblers and crumbles, desserts, fruit, Vegan Tags vegan, plant based, pear cobbler, cobbler, pears, fruit, dessert, easy, fall, pie, breakfast
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