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Green pea and Watermelon Radish Salad

March 5, 2022 Colleen Stem

We are getting closer and closer to spring (2 weeks!) and with spring comes color, in the form of all things, food included. (I am so ready for all the greens!!!!)

Speaking of color. Have you ever cut open a watermelon radish? It is pure joy. You have this creamy white and slightly green bulb, nothing much out of the ordinary but when you slice it open the inside is the brightest purplish pink. So freaking pretty! But better then pretty, watermelon radishes taste so freaking good! And then we have peas. They are just the best bright green and creamy little gems which pair perfectly prefect with the radish.

Bright purple radish and green peas tossed together with some onion and tahini. Yes and yes. On freaking tasty as all heck salad. A true spring delight!

Now to the pretty as all heck salad!

The stuff. A large watermelon radish, frozen and thawed green peas, red onion, tahini, red wine vinegar, salt and pepper, and aa small handful of cilantro.

First thing is to dice up radish. Cut into cubes about twice the size of a pea.

Place diced rashes on a lined baking sheet and pop into a hot oven.

In the mean time cut up the onion nice an thin.

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Place cut onion into a big bowl, add a sprinkle of salt, and add in the vinegar. Toss around and let sit for 5 minutes or so then add in the tahini and toss around until creamy.

Slightly roasted radishes. You can roast them more but I find a good 20 minutes so they are slightly tender and haven’t lost have much color to e the best.

Toss the peas onto the hot sheet pan with the radishes and let them sit for a fe minutes just slightly warm up.

Then dump the peas and radishes into the bowl with the tahini onions. Sprinkle with pepper and toss around.

Look at that. Gorgeous right? And if you have and want, toss some fresh cilantro or parsley onto top because why not.

No stop starting at the how pretty it is and you know, eat it.

-C


Green pea and Watermelon Radish Salad

serve 2-4 as a side

  • 2 cups green peas (fresh or frozen andthawed)

  • 1 large (softball sized) watermelon radish

  • 1 small red onion

  • 3 tablespoons tahini

  • 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar

  • salt and pwpper

  • handful of fresh cilantro or parsley (optional)

Preheat oven to 425.

Grab radish and cut into small cubes about twice the size of a pea. Place on a lined baking sheet and pop into hot oven.

While radishes are roasting, grab onion and slice as thin as you can Place sliced onion along with the vinegar into a big bowl and toss around with a pinch of salt. Let sit for a few minutes then add in the tahini. Toss around until creamy.

After about 20 minutes pull the radishes form oven They should be slightly tender. Dump peas onto baking sheet with radishes and let them warm up for a few minutes.

Dump the peas and radishes into the bowl with the tahini onions. Add black pepper and another small pinch of salt. Toss around until evenly coasted. Top with sm ripped up fresh herbs (if using).

Eat.

Store any leftovers (there will be none) in an airtight container for 4-5 days.

In Vegetables, Vegan, salad Tags Green pea and Watermelon Radish Salad, tahini, plant based, vegan, raw, fresh, spring, side dish, color, vegetables, peas, grain free, oil free, salad, simple, dairy free, food, recipe
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Roasted Roots Snack Plate

February 5, 2022 Colleen Stem

Did I make a roasted roots charcuterie of sorts? Yeah maybe I did, but I don’t know about calling it a charcuterie. I like to think of it more as a snack plate. And I say snack plate only because I placed everything on a plater which is, in fact, a very large plate. I could have showed you how I usually eat this, directly off a baking sheet, but that wouldn’t be as fun. And a snack plate looks a heck of a lot nicer when/if you want to share. Think of it. All your people around, snacking away in some dank ass roasted veggie. (No I did not share or even intend to share any. This was my lunch thank you very much.) Well not exactly something to day dream about but your people, if choosing to share, will really enjoy themselves while eating. Plus it works for any occasion where there are like people withl food allergies and easy to make all the people with all the different diets happy. Everyone can eat it. And it is really pretty. That counts as another plus.

This snack plate. Well it is basic. Just a bunch of the most delicious roots roasted up and served with dips. It is so simple and can be made with pretty much any veggies you like and then served with whatever dips you want. It is a choose your own adventure snack plate. You can even get fancy with it and serve it with nuts and olives and maybe some fruit or whatever but it is not necessary. And also I a want to make it clear, just because I called it a snack plate does not mean it needs to be a snack or that you have to share (see previous paragraph.) Eat is all to your face. I applaud you.

Now to the roasted roots!

The stuff. A bulb of celeriac, a big watermelon radish, a couple carrots and ac couple of beets. A big parsnip, some beets, vinegar and water, and salt and pepper.

Wash all the roots then cut them up. IF you want to peel go for it, but I don’t because I prefer not to.

Anyway, cut them all into wedges, shtik and or rounds. A variety of shapes is nice, just make sure that they are all roughly the same thickness.

Arrange all the cut roots on a baking sheet, trying not to overlap much. Sprinkle with water and vinegar then toss on a good pinch of salt and pepper.

Place in hot oven and roast.

40 fish minutes later, all tender and ready.

Place all your roasted roots on a large plate or plater, grab some dips of your choice (Mustard, hummus, and guacamole are excellent choices) and eat away. Or wait and serve whenever cause these snack situation is delicious eaten at any temperature.

-c


Roasted Roots Snack Plate

Note. The following is more of a suggestion then a recipe. Use as many roots as you like or stick with a just one or two.

  • a bulb of celeriac

  • 2 carrots

  • a large watermelon radish

  • 2 parsnips

  • 2 medium turnips

  • 2 medium beets

  • a couple teaspoons white vinegar and water

  • salt and pepper

  • Hummus, mustard, guacamole.. anything you like to dip veggies in. (optional)

Preheat oven to 425.

Prepare roots. Wash and cut them all into sticks, rounds, and or wedges, just make sure they are roughly the same thickness. Once all cut, place them on a baking sheet, trying not to overlap much, and sprinkle with a little water and a few teaspoons of vinegar (you can use a spray bottle or just flick the the water and vinegar with your fingers) Sprinkle with a good pinch of salt and black pepper.

Place in oven and bake for about 40 minutes or until all veggies are tender.

Remove from oven and let cool enough to handle them arrange on a large plate or plater along with at least one, if not many dips that you like.

Serve hot. Or warm. Room temperature is good or you can pre roasted refrigerate, then serve cold. Whatever temperature it’s fantastic!

In Vegan, Vegetables, snack Tags charcuterie, vegan, roasted roots, fresh, winter roots, dips, plant based, oil free, easy, snack plate, snack, lunch, dinner, gluten free, party, food, simpe
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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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Roasted Corn Hummus

August 7, 2021 Colleen Stem

How much hummus is to much hummus to eat? Seriously, how much? Because I eat A LOT of hummus, like hummus everyday, sometimes (all the time) even multiple times a day. And not just a little bit. Give me a bowl of it, any sized bowl, and see what I can do.

And I like just about any hummus, but with that said they are not all created equally. Homemade is almost always the superior, (although there are some brands that I really really like), freshly made is best, heavy on the lemon is a bonus, and some kind of mix in is always appreciated.

Roasted corn hummus. Oh boy did I attack this one. A base of a traditional creamy hummus in all it’s glory, blended up with freshly picked and freshly roasted sweet corn. When whipped up together it creates a soft, almost fluffy, creamy mixtures of all the goodness. It is so freaking good and is probably going to be my repeat hummus for the foreseeable future (until the corn stops growing). It really is a stand out. The mr and the littles even loved it and that is something.

To the hummus!

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The stuff. Freshly roasted corn on the cob, cooked chickpeas, tahini, some garlic cloves ,a lemon, salt, pepper and red pepper flakes , ice cubes, and a little olive oil.

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Basically the only work to do. Cut corn from cob.

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Add corn and garlic to food processor and pulse for a minute, scrapping down sides a few times. Add in the chickpeas, tahini, juice of the lemon, ice cubes, and red pepper flakes. Blend until nice and smooth. And that is it. Taste and add more salt and pepper if needed.

Scoop it all into a bowl and eat the hummus any way you see fit.

-C


Roasted Corn Hummus

makes about 3 cups

  • 2 roasted cobs of corn (2 cups cut from cob)*

  • 2 cups (or 1can) cooked and drained chickpeas

  • 1/3 cup tahini

  • 2 cloves garlic

  • a lemon

  • 3 ice cubes

  • salt and pepper

  • 1-2 teaspoons red pepper flakes

  • olive oil (optional to drizzle on at the end)

*There are many methods to cook corn so you can cook it any way you want. I just wet the corn still in the husk and pop it into a really hot oven or about 25 minutes.

Start by removing corn from the cob. Place corn and garlic into food processor and pulse for a minute, scraping down sides a couple times, until pretty blended up. Add in chickpeas, tahini, the juice from the lemon, ice cubes, and a good healthy pinch of salt and pepper and as much red pepper flakes as you want. Blend until smooth. Taste and add more salt and or pepper if needed.

Scoop into a bowl or container and drizzle with olive oil if desired.

Eat right away with cut up veggies, smeared in pita, with a spoon, or any other way you want to eat it.

Left overs can be stored in airtight container in fridge for a few days but really, who has left over hummus?

In Vegan, summer, pulses, hummus Tags Roasted Corn Hummus, corn, gluten free, vegan, fresh, summer, hummus, homemade, home Made, easy, spread, dip, dinner, plant based, protein
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