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Butternut and Beet Tacos

March 7, 2020 Colleen Stem
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There come a point every year, about this time actually, when all of a sudden I am not exactly sick of, but maybe a little bored with the same roasted root situation. Don’t get me wrong, I love root veggies. I deeply love them all and will gladly keep on eating them for a few more months (it is only March after all so I am looking at at least 2 more good months of roots) but again, a little bored. So instead of just the usually roasted situation, we still roast but then, THEN, we taco them!. And we are not mad about it.

These tacos. Super easy and they bring out the best in roasted beets and butternut squash. Pilled in a tortilla (corn or flour, or not tortilla at all. Your choice) with some almond cream and topped with a crispy, crunchy, cabbage and onion slaw. A meal worth making any night or saving for a fun mid winter taco party. Or both because let face it, if you have a fridge like mine, it is packed with beets (and rutabagas, and turnips, and parsnips). And you probably have 4 butternut squash in your pantry too right? (Again, not mad about it.)

Now to the tacos!

The stuff. Some butternut squash, a few beets, shredded cabbage, half an onion, red wine vinegar, blanched and soaked almonds, a couple cloves of garlic, a little water, a lemon, salt and pepper, taco seasoning, an avocado, and tortillas.

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Thinly slice the onion and toss it into a bowl along with the shredded cabbage, a pinch of salt, and the red wine vinegar. Really mix it up and then set aside.

Cut up the squash and the beets. 1/2 inch cubes are a good size.

Place the cut up squash and beets on a baking sheet. Drizzle with a touch of oil then really toss around with all the tacos seasoning.

Now into the oven to roast.

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Almonds, garlic, salt and pepper, a little water, and juice of lemon, go into blender and blended until nice and smooth.

Oh almond cream. I could eat this entire bowl just like this, but don’t do that. You need it for the tacos.

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Roasted and ready.

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Now it’s taco time. You have your roasted squash and beets, almond cream, quick pickled crispy cabbage and onion slaw, tortillas (store bought or hand made), and avocado. Lemon or lime wedges are also a plus.

And then you make a taco. Roosts first, almond cream next, slaw on top of that, finished off with avocado. Squeeze on the lemon and into you mouth it goes.

-C


Butternut and Beet Tacos

makes 6-8 tacos

  • 2 1/2 cups diced beets (2-3 large beets should do it)

  • 2 1/2 cups diced butternut squash (peeled or not, up to you)

  • 3 tablespoons taco seasoning or (1 tablespoon each cumin and chili power plus 1 teaspoon each paprika, garlic powder, and onion powder. And a pinch or red pepper flakes)

  • 1/2 cup blanched almonds (soaked in hot water for an hour or so)

  • a lemon

  • 1/2 cup - 3/4 cup warm water

  • 2 cloves garlic

  • salt and pepper

  • Splash of oil

  • 3 cups shredded cabbage (red, green, or a mixture of both)

  • 1/2 an onion

  • 3 tablespoons red wine vinegar

  • avocado for serving

  • at least 6 small or medium sized flour or corn tortillas

Preheat oven to 450

Grab cabbage and onion. Thinly slice the onion and toss into a bowl with the shredded cabbage. Add a good sprinkle of salt and toss along with the red wine vinegar. Set aside but give it a good toss again before serving.

Dice up butternut squash and beets into 1/2 inch cube pieces. Place on baking sheet with a drizzle of oil and toss around along with the spice blend. Place into oven to bake for about 30 minutes.

While that’s roasting, strain almonds of soaking water and place into blender along with the 2 cloves garlic, the juice of the lemon, and 1/2 cup water. Blend until smooth. Add in a pinch of salt and pepper and blend. If the mixture is to thick, add in more water to thin it out. You want it to be like a sour cream consistency.

And when the squash and beets are nice and tender, remove from oven.

To assemble tacos.

Scoop some of the roasted beet and squash mixture onto a tortilla, add a good dollop or two of the almond cream, then top with some of the cabbage and onion slaw. Top it of with some sliced avocado and serve with a wedge of lemon or lime.

In dinner, entree, grain free, Nuts, Vegan, Vegetables, winter squash, taco Tags Butternut and Beet Tacos, vegan, tacos, squash, almond cream, cabbage, avocado, dinner, grain free, gluten free, healthy, plant based, taco seasoning, food, recipe
3 Comments

Hummus Bowl with Roasted Veggies

November 30, 2019 Colleen Stem
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I eat so much hummus. Everyday, all day. Homemade, store bought. If there is hummus, I will be consuming it. But the thing is, I usually don’t eat more then a little at a time. (A little being like 1/2 a cup). And sure, sometimes that is just fine and enough, but other times, what I really want to do is garb a spoon and a bag of carrots and eat it all. And then I do.

But there is that little voice in the back of my head telling me that if someone where to catch me eating mounds of hummus, they would liken my eating behavior to that of someone eating a jar of mustard (Not going to lie, it happens sometimes) or of a bottle of ketchup (but I don’t eat ketchup) and that have a problem and shouldn’t being eating it like that. Because hummus, for some reason, has been put into the condiment category. It’s treated like a dip or a spread and that is fine and dandy to eat it as such, but hummus is so much more. It can, and should be treated more like a main component to a dish. So let us step outside of that box and eat it how we really want to eat it.

Hummus by the bowlful. I know right! It just makes so much sense to me. And now to you too. We need to stop stopping ourselves from just a scoop or two because really, that is just not enough. Nope, this is for real. A bowl, full of hummus, topped with roasted veggies because that is just more deliciousness. And we get to eat it all.

Life can be pretty great sometime, you know. HA

Now to the bowl of hummus!

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The stuff. We got chickpeas, tahini, a lemon, red wine vinegar, garlic, salt and pepper. And Veggies. Brussel Sprouts, broccoli, onion, Swiss chard, and kale.

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Chop up the broccoli, the onion and half or quarter the Brussel sprouts. And separately, chop up the kale and chard.

Toss the chopped Brussels, broccoli and onion into a baking sheet or oven safe skillet and season with salt and pepper. IF you want to toss in a little oil, go for it. Then pop the veggies into a hot oven to roast away.

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Once the veggies are just about done to your liking, grab the chopped kale and chard and off to the veggies. Toss and roast for a few more minutes.

Done.

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Hummus. Chickpeas with liquid, garlic, tahini, juice of lemon, and blend. Creamy smooth and delicious.

Dump that hummus into bowls.

And top with roasted veggies.

Would you look at that. Now all you need to to is dig in. Serve with extra lemon and black pepper. Grab your utensil of choice and eat.

-C


Hummus Bowl with Roasted Veggies

makes 2 servings if eating as a meal

  • 3 cups cooked chickpeas in liquid

  • A lemon

  • 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar

  • 2-3 cloves garlic

  • 1/4 cup tahini

  • salt and pepper

  • 10 or so Brussel sprouts

  • A small head of broccoli

  • A small onion

  • 5-6 kale and or Swiss chard leaves

Note. Use whatever veggies you want. Fresh or already prepared. All and any leftovers would be great.

Preheat oven to 450.

Cut Brussel sprouts in half, chop the onion into small pieces, and cut up the broccoli and toss onto a baking sheet or an oven safe skillet. Sprinkle with a little salt and pepper and stick into the oven to roast for about 20 ish minutes or until nice and roasted. Feel free to toss the veggies in a little oil if you want. Chop up the kale and chard into smaller pieces. Once veggies are just a few minutes from being cooked to you liking, remove from oven, and toss in the greens. Cook for another 5 or so minutes until those are nice and wilted. Remove veggies from oven.

While veggies are roasting, make hummus. Place chick peas with liquid, the juice of the lemon, vinegar, garlic, and tahini into a food processor. Blend until smooth and creamy. Taste and season with salt and pepper to your liking. Dump into a bowls.

And when you have hummus make and veggies roasted, its time to compile. Dump the hummus into 2 bowls. Dump half of the roasted veggies into each bowl.. Squeeze more lemon juice onto both then grab a fork.

Eat. And yes, lick bowl clean. No shame.

In beans, dinner, Gluten Free, grain free, pulses, quick and easy, Vegan, Vegetables Tags Hummus Bowl With Roasted Veggies, Hummus, roasted veggies, clean eating, plant based, grain free, gluten free, dairy free, vegan, vegetables, vegetarian, simple, easy, fast, pulses, beans, fresh, farm, protein, dinner, main dish, left overs
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Carrot Ginger Falafel With Tahini Cabbage slaw

November 2, 2019 Colleen Stem
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If you are a falafel fan, as I am, then this one is for you. Carrot ginger falafel. Oh yes. Warm and spicy and carroty and all the things that are good, packed into a chickpea ball of mouth sized proportions. When I thought of it it sounded good, When I made it and ate it, it was everything and more I could have asked for in a freaking fantastic falafel. As for the tahini cabbage slaw, I might just be making it in my house every dang day. Super easy, super tasty, goes with the falafel like whoa but is just as good eaten on it’s own. Eaten together the pair make every inch of mouth space happy. A happy mouth space, what more can you ask for?

To the falafel!

The stuff. Cooked chickpeas, carrots, a piece of fresh ginger, tahini, soy sauce, cabbage, an onion, a few cloves of garlic, red wine vinegar, some cumin and red pepper flakes, a lemon, chickpea flour, salt and pepper, and oil.

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Start off by chopping the carrots into small pieces. Then cut half of the onion into small pieces. Rough chop the garlic and the ginger as well. No need to peel ginger unless you really want to.

Place it all into food processor and pulse until a small crumble.

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Carrot onion garlic ginger mixture.

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Dump mixture into a skillet with a splash of water. Add in the cumin, chili flakes, and a good pinch of salt and pepper and cook on the stove for 5-8 minutes until the crumble softens and becomes fragrant.

Dump carrot ginger mixture back into food processor along with the chickpeas, chickpea flour, and the juice of the lemon. Puree until smooth.

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Carrot ginger falafel mixture. Now stick it in the fridge. For a little while to a day, just to let it set up a bit.

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And in the mean time you can make the slaw. Shred cabbage and cut up onion all nice and thin.

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Dump tahini, soy, vinegar, and a few tablespoons warm water into bowl and mix until creamy and good.

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Toss in that cabbage and onion. Now you have tahini cabbage slaw.

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Now to cook falafel. Grab the batter, scoop into balls then smoosh into disks. Place in a light oiled skillet and brown each side a nice golden brown.

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After browning, place on a baking sheet. Once all the falafel has been browned, place the baking sheet into the oven to finish up cooking. 20 minutes or so and you got yourself falafel.

Then eat it. Falafel topped with tahini cabbage slaw. That is how it’s done, with or without wraps or pitas or whatever your want. Just as it is. Falafel, cabbage slaw, into mouth.

Good things friend.

-C


Carrot Ginger Falafel With Tahini Cabbage slaw

serves 3-4 people or makes 14-16 falafel balls

  • For the falafel

  • 2 cups cooked chickpeas drained

  • 3-4 carrots (around 2 cups diced)

  • 1/2 of a red onion

  • 2 inches fresh ginger

  • 2-3 cloves garlic

  • 1 teaspoon cumin

  • 1/2 teaspoon chili flakes

  • 1/3 cup chickpea flour (can sub in oat flour if needed)

  • juice of a small lemon

  • salt and pepper

  • For Tahini Cabbage Slaw

  • 1/2 head red or green cabbage (about 3 cups shredded)

  • 1/2 of a red onion

  • 3 tablespoon tahini

  • 1 tablespoon soy or liquid aminos

  • 2 tablespoon red wine vinegar

  • a few tablespoons warm water

Grab carrots and red onion. Chop carrots into small chunks and cut onion in half. Cut one half into chunks. Place in food processor. Take the ginger and cut into small chunks (you don’t need to peel it) and peel and slice garlic and cut into small pieces. Add that to the food processor. Pulse the mixture into a very small crumble then dump the mixture into a skillet with a splash of water. Add in the cumin, chili flakes, and a good pinch of salt and lots of pepper, and place on medium heat and cook for 5-8 minutes until soft and fragrant. Once cooked, scoop back into food processor along with the chickpeas, chickpea flour, and the juice of the lemon. Turn on and and puree until smooth, stopping when needed to scrap down the side. Then either dump mixture into a bowl or leave in the container you processed it in and place in fridge for 1/2 hour to a day.

When ready to cook, preheat oven to 400.

After letting the dough sit for a bit, remove from fridge. Grab skillet and lightly oil it and place on medium heat. Take a cookie scoop or just a spoon and scoop balls of falafel into your hand and roll them around so they are packed together. Smoosh then balls a little into disks and place into hot skillet. Let cook until bottom is golden brown then gently flip and cook the other side until browned. Place cooked falafel on a baking sheet. Once you have browned all the falafel, place into oven to bake for about 20 minutes or until the falafel has firmed up to your liking.

To make the tahini cabbage slaw. Shred cabbage and cut the remaining half of red onion into thin pieces. Place tahini, soy, vinegar, and 2 tablespoons warm water into a big bowl. Mix together until light and creamy. If the mixture seems to thick, add another tablespoon of warm water. When happy with consistency, add in the cabbage and onion and toss around until everything is coated.

Now when the slaw is made, the falafel is cooked, you eat it. Serve with warm pita or wraps or a bed of greens or nothing. Just slaw on top of falafel. And FYI, this whole shebang can be eaten hot or cold or anywhere in between.

In Vegetables, Vegan, pulses, grain free, Gluten Free, entree, Dairy Free, beans Tags Carrot ginger Falafel, falafel, cabbage slaw, tahini, vegan, gluten free, dairy free, vegan dinner, beans, pulses, vegetables, healthy, plant based, spices, diner, food, easy, make ahead, vegetarian, everyone will eat, food restrictions, grain free
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Celeriac Puree With Crispy Lentils

October 12, 2019 Colleen Stem
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Every now and then I make something for me. All for me. This is one of those dishes that was not destined to be shared with anyone. That I had no one else in mind to eat besides me. No worring about what anyone else with think. Just a simple little dish that I was craving and wanting.

So I made it and man, was it so freaking satisfying. Cooking for oneself is very much a gratifying experience.

Celeriac, or also know as celery root. Have you ever had it? If not, well duder, you need to. It is in my top 3 favorite vegetables and that is saying a lot. So anyway, celeriac, has a slight celery taste, but also kind of earthy and nutty. It pairs well with anything that a potato might, but also is amazing on it’s own. Roasted, steamed, raw. Just really fantastic. And it is in season so get on it and go find yourself some.

And lentils. In my top 3 favorite foods. Made them crispy because pureed celeriac and crispy lentils just sounded right and I love me crispy things. Again, I was making this dish fo me so crispy was happening.

Together, the creamy, delicious pureed celeriac covered with a bunch of spiced, crispy lentil….Amazing. Eating it, I couldn’t have been happier. I did myself one good with this one.

I might even have to make it to share someday.

Now to the celeriac and lentils!

The stuff. A bulb of celeriac, some cooked lentils, salt and pepper, chili powder, garlic powder. mustard powder, and oil. (oil is optional)

The celeriac. Ok, so most people peel it. I actually get weird looks from people when I tell them I don't , but let me do me, you know. So anyway. Peel it if you want, or not, just cut it up into chunks.

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Place cut up celeriac into a pot and cover with water. Place on stove on medium heat and cook until fork tender.

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Lentils meet spices and get mix all together. Add a pinch of salt and lots of cracked pepper too.

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Spread now spiced lentils onto a baking sheet, pop into oven, and bake until crispy. Easy peasy.

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And to puree the celeriac. Strain any extra water into a cup. Season with a pinch of salt and pepper and grab the hand blender (or regular blender) and blend it, adding back in some of the strained water as needed, to get to a consistency that you like. Me, I liked it pretty smooth, but also with a little chunk. Heck, you could leave it really chunky or go all out completely smooth. Up to you. Also if you want a creamier texture, add in a teaspoon or so of the olive oil. That is a taste preference. I didn't add oil this time, but I have before. It’s good both ways.

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And there you have it. Add the celeriac puree to a bowl, top with crispy lentils, and garnish with something green if you want.

Then eat it.

Not going to lie. After this picture was taken, I busted out the spicy mustard and covered everything with it. And it was amazing.

-C


Celeriac Puree With Crispy Lentils

serves 1 as a meal, or a few as a side dish

  • 1 1/2 cups cooked green lentils

  • 1 large celeriac bulb (soft ball sized)

  • 1 teaspoon chili power

  • 1/2 teaspoon ground mustard powder

  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder

  • salt and pepper

  • olive oil (optional)

Grab celeriac and peel if you want, or just give it a really good wash. Cut into chunks and place into pot. Add enough water to just cover the celeriac and place on medium heat on the stove. Cook until fork tender.

In the mean time, mix all the spices and a good pinch of salt and lots of pepper together with the lentils. Dump them and spread them out onto a lightly oiled baking sheet. Place in oven and turn to 400 degrees (you can start cooking the lentils while the oven is preheating). Bake for about 20 minutes or until lentils are crispy.

Once the celeriac is tender, strain water into a cup and either with a hand blender or a regular blender, blend until smooth, adding in some of the poured off water as needed. You can puree as smoothly as you like or leave a few chunks.. Also, you might want to add in a teaspoon or so of olive oil for a slightly richer and creamier taste. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Ehen the lentils are done, take them from oven. Place large amount (or all) of the celeriac puree to a bowl, cover with some (or all) of the crispy lentils and that is that. Eat away.

Serving suggestion…. Mustard. Any kind. So good.

In Dairy Free, dinner, entree, Gluten Free, grain free, pulses, quick and easy, side dish, Vegan, Vegetables Tags Celeriac Puree With Crispy Lentils, plant based, vegan, roots, vegetable, pulses, lentils, easy, gluten free, grain free, celery root, heathy, clean eating, dinner, dairy free, celeriac puree, crispy lentils
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Falafel Stuffed Peppers With Pickled onions and Tahini

September 21, 2019 Colleen Stem
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I love me some falafel. I love me some peppers. So I guess it is natural that I would want to stuff falafel inside of peppers and eat them all to my face right? I think so.

As we all already know, most of what I cook is depicted by whatever I get at farm share. And the past few weeks we have been getting a lot of peppers. I have been happily eating one or two a day, just as they are, but I figured it was time that I did something else with them. Now what is the first thing that comes to mind with peppers? Stuffed peppers of course. And there you have it, falafel stuffed peppers.

So I am not going to lie and say the mr ate them and swooned. He is not the biggest fan of peppers (I am starting to realize that he doesn’t have all the right taste buds in his mouth. So sad for him.) so he dumped the falafel out of the pepper and ate it with most of the pickled onions, the tahini, and rice. That he really liked. Lucky me, I wanted his pepper anyway because roasted peppers are freaking fantastic amazing and whatever him. Me, as a pepper and falafel lover, I found these stuffed peppers to be everything that I wanted and needed and then some. Eaten pretty much right away warm, with pickled onion and covered in all the tahini, it was a very very satisfying meal. But also a left over stuffed pepper that was stuck in the fridge, eaten cold standing in front of said fridge, right before bed. That was something great as well. I might have even gone in for a second one……

Anyway, a pepper stuffed with falafel is a good idea if you want food, like peppers, like falafel, and are cool. Just saying.

To the falafel stuffed peppers!

The stuff. A few sweet peppers, some cooked chickpeas, chickpea flour, an onion, a bunch of fresh cilantro and parsley, a few cloves of garlic, red wine vinegar, a little water, tahini, cumin, chili pepper flakes, and salt and pepper.

First, take the onion and cut in half. Take one half and cut into very thin slices, place in a bowl, sprinkle with a pinch of salt and toss with the vinegar and a few tablespoons of water. Set that bowl aside. The other half of onion just cut into a few smaller chunks.

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To make falafel. Add the chunks of onion and garlic to food processor and pules a few times to start chopping it up. Add in the cilantro and parsley, the chickpeas and chickpea flour, the cumin and chili pepper flakes, and a good few pinches of salt and lots of pepper. Pulse until completely combined but still a bit chunky. OR pulse until smooth if you would rather it like that. It’s up to you.

Grab peppers and cut each in half. Remove the ribs ad the seeds.

Take falafel mix and stuff it into peppers.

Place peppers onto a baking sheet and into the oven they go.

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In the meantime while the peppers are cooking, toss the onions around in the brine a few times. Then right before you take the peppers from the oven, drain the brine from the onions into a jar with the tahini and mix until smooth. Add a splash of water to the mix if you need to loosen it up a bit more to make the consistency of the tahini drizzle-able.

And out they come when all roasted and crispy and my oh my, so good!

Now you eat. Garb a bowl, maybe a grain of some sort if you like (I made the mr rice), plop a pepper down, add some pickled onions and drizzle that tahini all over.

Eat.

-C


Falafel Stuffed peppers with Pickled Onions and Tahini

Makes 6 half peppers stuffed

  • 3 medium sized sweet peppers

  • 2 cups cooked and drained chickpeas (or one can)

  • 1 large onion

  • 1 bunch (about 1/2 cup packed) cilantro

  • 1 bunch (about 1/2 cup packed parley

  • 2-3 cloves garlic

  • 2 teaspoons cumin

  • 1 teaspoon chili peper flakes

  • 1/3 cup chickpea flour or oat flour if you don’t have chickpea

  • salt and pepper

  • 1/4 cup tahini

  • a few tablespoons water

  • 3 tablespoon red wine vinegar

Preheat oven to 425

Grab the onion and cut in half. Take one half and cut into very thin slices and place in a bowl. Spinkle with a pinch of salt and dump in the vinegar along with about 2 tablespoon water. Toss around until all the onion is coated and set aside.

Take remaining half onion and cut into big chunks. Toss into a food processor along with the garlic and pulse a few times until the onion is chopped up. Add in the cilantro, parsley, chickpeas, chickpea flour, cumin, chili pepper flakes, and a good pinch of salt and lots of pepper. Pulse the hole shebang until the mixture is combined, the herbs are incropeted, but there is a little chunk left. Or you could make it smooth if you wanted too. It’s up to you.

Grab the peppers and cut them in half. Remove the ribs and seeds then take the falafel mixture and evenly distribute it between the peppers halves.

Place stuffed peppers on a baking sheet, falafel side up, and place into oven to bake for about 45 minutes. You want the falafel mix to have a chance to cook inside and out and to get nice and golden brown and crispy on top.

Right before the peppers are done, grab the onions and the tahini. Toss the onions one last time in the briny mix it’s been sitting in, then drain that brine into the tahini. Mix around until smooth. The tahini should be at the consistency to drizzle so if it is still to thick, add in a splash of hot water to loosen it up.

Once peppers are cooked, remove fro oven. Place on a plate with or without some grain, toss on some pickled onion and drizzle tahini all over.

Eat.

Store left over peppers in a the fridge. To eat, just reheat or eat cold. I really enjoyed eating one cold.

In Vegetables, Vegan, pulses, Pickled, grain free, Gluten Free, entree, Dairy Free, beans Tags Falafel Stuffed peppers with Pickled Onions and Tahini, Stuffed peppers, vegan, dinner, Vegan stuffed peppers, Gluten free, Gluten free stuffed peppers, grain free, grain free stuffed peppers, falafel, dairy free, sweet peppers, entree, protein, pulses, chickpeas, homemade, easy, healthy
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