Spring Veggies - 5 Ways

Spring Veggies - 5 Ways

No matter where you live - in the city or in the country - summertime in the Upper Midwest is a time to enjoy the weather, not to spend hours in the kitchen preparing meals!

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A Gift For You and For You to Share

Whether we share our family recipes, our own creations, riffs on classics, or recipes informed by traditional medicine, our hope is that our recipes and food stories provide nourishment of both body and soul. They are sent with love and warm wishes.

This holiday season we’re sharing some of the “golden-oldie” favorites…

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Mocktails & Cocktails for Your Seasonal Celebrations

When I was a girl, the Christmas holiday was a weeklong gathering of my mom’s five siblings and all of their children in my grandparents’ house. We all cooked, baked cookies, strung popcorn and cranberries to hang on the tree, played cards, and sang together in the days leading up to Christmas.

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Veggie Curry: Spiced to Ignite Your Digestive Fires and Soothe Your Soul

If you have not prepared Indian food, this vibrantly yellow curry is a great place to start. Once you have these spices on hand, you can use them in varying combinations to prepare a variety of Indian dishes in addition to various curries including biryani, korma, and vindaloo.

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Pear Cardamom Galette

Pear Cardamom Galette

I love galette as a vehicle for pears because their subtle flavor can get lost in a more complicated dessert. An added bonus — this pastry is so simple to make, especially if you use a premade crust….

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Tepache: Homemade Probiotic Pineapple Brew

Tepache is a yummy, lightly sweet, and refreshing drink prepared using only three ingredients: pineapple peels, sugar, and water.  Similar to kombucha, it is carbonated, probiotic, and contains a small amount of alcohol, usually about two to three percent.  It is believed that tepache helps restore intestinal flora, especially if consumed before breakfast, due to its probiotic content. It contains vitamin C, a powerful antioxidant, and bromelain, an enzyme that helps flush out your digestive system with its diuretic and protein-digestion properties.

 

Tepache, otherwise known as tepache de pina or pineapple beer, is a fermented drink that comes from Mexico, originally prepared with corn in the states of Veracruz and Oaxaca. Many variations exist, depending on the region. Sometimes it is spiced with cinnamon and cloves, ginger, lemon, or other fruits such as berries.  Like kombucha, it can be flavored to suit your taste; the options are endless.

 
 

This is how the fermentation process works: There is yeast living virtually everywhere, and it can be harnessed to make delicious foods and beverages.  Yeast living on flour makes sourdough, yeast on tea makes kombucha, and yeast on pineapple skin makes tepache. By feeding the yeast what it loves to eat (sugar) you create flavor, bubbles, and probiotics. 

 

Making tepache is simple.  My first attempt resulted in a lightly sweet pineapple soda-like drink with lots of bubbles, and it wildly exceeded my expectations.  I’ve never actually had a batch fail. If I can do it, anyone can.

 

RECIPE

 

Ingredients:

  • Pineapple peel: Conventional pineapples are grown with lots of pesticides, so obtain organic if possible. Remove the crown and base of the pineapple and then rinse the body of the pineapple with cool tap water to remove potential pests and dirt. Don’t scrub or use hot water – we want the naturally-occurring yeast to remain on the skin.  Cut the peel from the pineapple in big chunks, leaving about ½-inch of the pineapple flesh on the peel.

  • Sugar: Use either 1 large cone piloncillo (traditional Mexican sugar) or 1 cup brown sugar or white sugar.  I always use brown sugar because that’s what I have on-hand.

  • Water: Using filtered, non-chlorinated water, or distilled water is best to ensure that fermentation is not inhibited by chlorine. I did use tap water once in a pinch, and it worked fine. 

  • Optional flavors: Use any or all of these: 2 thumbs sliced ginger, ½ red chili, 1 cinnamon stick, 3 whole cloves, or anything you might add to kombucha 

 

Steps:

  1. Dissolve 1 cup of sugar in 8 cups of water.  If you are using piloncillo sugar or old, clumpy brown sugar, you may need to heat the water first to dissolve the sugar. Be sure to let it cool before proceeding to make sure our yeast friends survive. Add sugar water solution to a large sterile glass jar, pitcher, or ceramic crock.

  2. Add optional flavors and pineapple rinds. Submerge all ingredients in the liquid to prevent molding by weighing it down using a small glass plate, cup, or fermentation weights.

  3. Cover the jar with a clean dish towel or a few layers of paper towels and secure with a rubber band.  Place jar in a dark spot or on your countertop covered by a dishtowel.

  4. Now it's fermentation time! After about 24 hours check your brew and remove any white scum that may be present on top of the liquid. Then let sit another 24 - 36 hours. If your house is warm, it will be done more quickly.  Letting it go too long will result in vinegar. When you see many small bubbles on top, it’s ready.  Remove scum and strain. You can either drink right away or carbonate in a second fermentation.

  5. A second fermentation is optional and also recommended because this is when bubbles are born!   With the bubbles comes pressure build-up inside the bottles. And the tepache can be very bubbly – like Sprite. There is a risk of bottles exploding, so check on your bottles regularly and use care when storing and handling. I put mine in a covered plastic storage bin just in case.  To prepare for a second fermentation, remove any scum on top and strain the liquid through a fine mesh sieve or cheesecloth. Funnel liquid into fermentation bottles. I use the ones with flip-top caps.  Mason jars don’t work because they allow air to escape which will result in no bubble formation. Wine bottles don’t work because the corks blow out.  Set the bottles somewhere dark and allow them to ferment for 1 - 3 days. Check every 12 - 24 hours until the level of carbonation desired is reached. Move bottles to the refrigerator when done. The finished tepache in a sealed container in the refrigerator will keep for at least a year. In theory, like most fermented beverages, it will last virtually forever due to its acidity (it never hangs around my house long enough to test that). Over time, the flavors continue to develop to be yeastier, like beer, and less sweet, like pineapple soda. 

  6. Tepache can be enjoyed straight-up, over ice, cut with sparkling water, or in a cocktail.  Here are some taste-bud-dazzling treats I’ve tried:

    1. Mezcal, Cointreau, fresh strawberries and pineapple muddle, and lime juice

    2. Rum and lemon juice

    3. Tequila, ginger juice, honey, and lime juice

    4. Pear juice, agave syrup, muddled Thai basil, and lemon juice

 

 

Practice with Maureen

 

Refreshing Summertime Fruit Soups

Refreshing Summertime Fruit Soups

Eating with the seasons is a simple way to eat healthier and nurture Mother Nature. Strawberry season is in full swing and blueberries aren't far behind. These refreshing fruit soup recipes are easy to make and can easily be modified to use whatever fruits are fresh and available.

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Fermenting foods is easy, fun, and affordable. The options are endless. Full disclosure: I am definitely not an expert; I am more of a fermentation beginner. This recipe is the first one I tried and should give you an idea of what is involved, how easy the process is, and if you might be interested…

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This recipe is just as good reheated as it is the day it is made, maybe even better. Best of all, it is simple and easy, the way life should be. Try it in tacos, enchiladas, burritos, salads, burrito bowls, or try it in one of the recipes from our e-Book.

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Nothing sings of summer more to me than walking the aisles of a farmers’ market. No matter where I am in the world, anyone who knows me knows my not-so-secret passion is to go to the market and check out what’s happening. This year I’m thinking about making a yet untested recipe for a tomato chutney once my plant comes into its own in a couple weeks; for now, though, what’s on my mind is Armenian Stuffed Grape Leaves or Summer Dolma.

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On virtually every retreat Green Lotus leads, we arrange a cooking lesson. Cooking together in distant lands or other parts of this country creates bonds and breaks down barriers. People who chop together say together! This recipe - from Chef Mario at Xinalani, a spectacular, tucked-away paradise north of Puerto Vallarta, GL retreat to Mexico - pleased everyone.

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