Saturday, July 26, 2008

It all started with the Axis of Evil Banquet

No cookbook or recipe collection is complete without Lauren Eggert-Crowe's zine, Axis of Evil Banquet: An Intersection of Recipes and Politics (you can purchase a copy at http://www.galateaspants.com/issues.htm). Recipes from all over the world mixed with political commentary make this zine one of a kind and just the umph I needed to chop and blend tomatoes and such into gazpacho.

This particular blend of gazpacho came out a little differently since I added more celery and garlic (10 cloves). In between tossing ingredients into the blender and tasting, I tried to keep note of measurements and amounts as best as possible. So, here goes! I look forward to your comments about your fave gazpacho recipes and tricks. :0

About 1 1/2-2 lbs. yellow and red tomatoes combined
fresh parsley to taste (remember, baby steps!)
fresh chives to taste
5-10 cloves fresh garlic
2 cucumbers peeled and sliced
1/3 cup red wine vinegar
3 celery stalks
juice from 1 medium lemon
1 small red onion
2 11.5 oz cans V8
salt and pepper to taste

Blend, taste, add more whatever, blend, taste, etc.

Take it all out on your gazpacho, and then stick your face in the bowl!!!

Lemme know what happens!

Saturday, July 19, 2008

mmm...veggie sushi

I just made some yummy veggie sushi rolls with some leftover cabbage salad (which just gets better the longer you leave it in the fridge!).

Cabbage Salad:

1 head green cabbage shredded
1 head purple cabbage shredded
As many carrots as you like shredded
shredded radishes (to taste)
1 bottle Annie's Asian Sesame Dressing (or you can make your own by experimenting with a mix of peanut oil, sesame seed oil, soy sauce, lime juice, cane juice or sugar, ginger, and sesame seeds)
raw peanuts
juice from 1 lime
fresh orange bits upon serving (I don't recommend letting orange marinate in the fridge with the salad as it may sour)

Let salad sit in fridge for at least one day.

Now... for the sushi part! Ta-da!

1. Dampen individual sheets of dried seaweed
2. Place a couple tablespoons of cabbage salad in the center, and set aside
3. Boil, broil, or microwave a sweet potato (cut into chunks before cooking :)) until tender
4. Chop up some shitake mushrooms
4. Fire up your cast iron skillet or wok, and when hot, add a couple tablespoons sesame oil
5. When oil is hot, add mushrooms and cooked sweet potato to cabbage already doled out on seaweed sheets
6. Sprinkle 1 tsp. soy sauce (or soyaki) over veggies as well as some sriracha chili sauce (ah, you like the spice!)
6. Get creative with making your roll. Sometimes I just roll it up like a little burrito, or I get wild and make a seaweed cornucopia (maybe you are super crafty and can make a venus flytrap shape)

It's OK if the roll doesn't stay together very well because messy eating is the best eating!

BTW, your two-headed babies will love it!