Category Archives: Recipes

Lifestyle: Recipe – Mexican Street Corn and Homemade Tortillas

Seems like it’s been awhile since I posted a recipe! Sorry about that! I have gotten a lot of new cooking inspiration  lately and been indulging in that. My parents gifted me the Ninja Foodi 4-in-1 Grill for Christmas so I’ve been enjoying grilled food in my apartment! Once I have a worthy recipe to post I will. I’ve mostly been enjoying burgers and salmon. Today I have a meal combo I couldn’t resist posting about. I adapted thestayathomechef’s Mexican Street Corn soup, thickened it up and put it on homemade tortillas!

Ingredients

  • 4 tablespoons butter
  • 1 small white onion chopped
  • 1 jalapeno minced
  • 5 cloves garlic crushed
  • 3 tablespoons flour
  • 2 teaspoons ground cumin
  • 1 teaspoon chili powder
  • 4 cups chicken stock
  • 6 cups frozen corn kernels
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 1/2 cups heavy cream half and half, or milk
  • 1 cup freshly chopped cilantro

Toppings:

  • 1/2 lb bacon cooked and crumbled
  • 1/2 cup crumbled cotija cheese
  • 1 jalapeno sliced

Instructions

  • Melt the butter in a large saucepan over medium high heat. Add in the onions and minced jalapeno and sauté for about 5 minutes, then stir in garlic and cook an additional 1 minute.
  • Stir in the flour, cumin, and chili powder and cook 1-2 minutes. Whisk in the chicken stock until smooth and bring to a boil. Add in the corn, sugar, and salt. Once it returns to a boil, reduce the heat to low and simmer 10 minutes.
  • Stir in cream and cilantro. Serve topped with crumbled bacon, cotija, and jalapeno slices.

Nutrition

Calories: 687kcal | Carbohydrates: 45g | Protein: 16g | Fat: 51g | Saturated Fat: 26g | Cholesterol: 142mg | Sodium: 1797mg | Potassium: 590mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 11g | Vitamin A: 1585IU | Vitamin C: 11.7mg | Calcium: 133mg | Iron: 2.3mg

Lifestyle: Baked – Crunchy Rosemary and Olive Bread

I had been craving some really fresh bread and decided to make some this weekend! I found a really simple recipe off of Pinterest and adopted this savory bread from LivingSweetMoments.Com but then just added my own spices!

Rosemary Olive Bread Recipe
Prep Time
15 mins
Cook Time
50 mins
Total Time
1 hr 5 mins

This amazing Rosemary Olive Bread Recipe has a nice crust on the outside and chewy on the inside. Better than any bakery. Enjoy a few slices with olive oil

Course: Bread
Servings: loaf
Author: Tiffany Bendayan
Ingredients
  • 3 cups Bread Flour
  • 1 2/3 cups Water room temperature
  • 1/2 teaspoon Instant Yeast
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons Salt
  • 1/2 cup Kalamata Olives chopped
  • 1 tablespoon Fresh Rosemary chopped
Instructions
  1. In a bowl the flour, salt, yeast, and water together. Use a wooden spoon to stir all the ingredients until combined

  2. Add the rosemary and olives. Mix it in the dough

  3. Wrap plastic wrap on top of the bowl and let it proof for about 12 to 18 hours

  4. Preheat oven to 450 degrees Fahrenheit

  5. Place a dutch oven with lid inside the oven to preheat for 30 minutes

  6. Meanwhile, on a floured surface, drop the dough and shape into a ball or your desired shape

  7. Make 3 shallow slits at the top the bread

  8. Cover the bread with a clean kitchen towel while the dutch oven preheats

  9. Carefully, place the dough inside the preheated dutch oven. Cover with lid

  10. Bake for 30 minutes

  11. Remove the lid and bake for 10-15 minutes more or until browned on top and crusty

  12. When ready, place the bread on a cooling rack

  13. Enjoy!

Almond Milk

 

Fresh raw almond milk is delicious, healthy, unprocessed, and economical. There is no waste, no unrecyclable plastic-lined tetra-pak boxes or cartons to put in landfills and drink BPA out of, and this tastes much, much better than storebought. The resulting almond meal is a free bonus, useful in cookies, crumb crusts, porridge, granolas, or in lieu of bread crumbs in stuffings and dressings, breaded crusts, etc.

To make a half gallon (or 2 liters) of delicious fresh almond milk, you will need:

about a pound (or roughly half a kilo) of fresh raw almonds out of the shell
A blender or food processor
A large bowl to strain into
A mesh bag or cheesecloth for first straining
A reusable fine wire mesh coffee cone or fine muslin bag for second straining
A half gallon or 2 liter refrigerator jug to keep it in
A few pinches of salt (optional)
Sweetener of your choice, to taste (optional)

You will be using about 3 cups of water for every 1 cup of raw almonds out of the shell. Soak overnight in enough water to cover with a little water more, to provide room for swelling. Another easier way to measure if you want to make 2 quarts or 2 liters at a time, is that 1 lb (or roughly a half kilo) of raw almonds out of the shell, makes a half gallon or 2 quarts or roughly 2 liters of creamy, rich almond milk when sufficient water is added after squeezing, to equal that volume. You can of course halve the water to make an almond cream suitable as coffee creamer, nog base, cream pies, or other uses where milk may be too thin.

A quick whir in a powerful blender results in a thick, frothy almond puree, ready to be squeezed in a mesh bag or jelly bag, cheesecloth, or something similar. Simply place your cheesecloth or mesh strainer bag over the bowl, pour and scoop your puree into it, draw it closed, and start squeezing until the almond meal is as dry as you can get it. Don’t add any more water at this point.

The harder you squeeze, the more creamy and nutritious your milk will be, but not to worry, any you don’t get into the milk will still be eaten in the form of the almond meal, so there is nothing wasted. I use a fine plastic mesh drawstring bag that doubles as a shopping bag for small loose items like garlic or peppers.

then pour the undiluted almond milk (that I just strained through the bag into a bowl) through a reusable gold metal mesh coffee cone filter. When it slows, gentle stirring makes filtering go faster. At the end, I press the bit of almond paste in the bottom to extract the last and creamiest bit. This finer, white almond meal is good to keep and dry separately and use as almond flour.

I make this easier by straining it the second time directly into my glass half-gallon refrigerator pitcher, and then adding more water to fill the pitcher, but if you are making an amount different from a half gallon, proceed accordingly to get an end result of 3 cups of water for every cup of almond. You may thin it to taste by adding water, but better too rich than too thin, because too rich can be solved by adding water, but too thin is too bad.

Let it sit covered in the refrigerator pitcher for 24 hours. You will notice a creamy layer floats on top, but with a few gentle shaking sessions and a day or so in the refrigerator, it will blend nicely and taste superbly creamy. Once that has happened, add sweetener if you choose, and salt a pinch at a time, shaking in between and tasting, until the flavor goes from a little “flat” with no salt, to “better than any milk I ever tasted” (perfect). If not sure, hold back on another pinch of salt because one pinch too many ruins it. If you accidentally do add that one extra pinch past perfect taste, add more sweetener and it will no longer taste salty. Some add vanilla, others add almond extract or other flavors. You can even add dutched cocoa for a creamy sensation.

See how this clings to the glass like the freshest dairy milk? Commercial preparations use thickeners such as guar gum to achieve something similar but their results are inferior. It’s hard not to drink it all up the first day, but it’s even better the second. Keeps about a week in the refrigerator, but don’t leave it out on the counter unless you want to experiment with raw almond yogurt or kefir.

Now you can enjoy lowcarb (depending on type and amount of sweetener if any) delicious vegan milk useful in vegan nogs, cream soups, mac-n-cheese, cream pies, alfredo, and so forth, whilst saving money over wasteful inferior pasteurized storebought concoctions, and keep your almond meal for the same price!

As for the almond meal, that may be another Instructable, but briefly, you spread it out on a half-sheet in a 300 degree F oven stirring a few times here and there until toasty and dry. Store in a jar, use as breadcrumbs, crumb crusts, breading, stuffing, cookies, cakes, and bars, or make into low glycemic granola.

Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-Milk-an-Almond-fresh-homemade-almond-milk/

Simple Almond Flour bread

2½ cups blanched almond flour (ground almonds)
½ teaspoon celtic sea salt
½ teaspoon baking soda
3 eggs
1 tablespoon agave nectar (or maple syrup)
½ teaspoon apple cider vinegar
In a large bowl, combine almond flour, salt and baking soda
In a medium bowl, whisk the eggs, then add agave and vinegar
Stir wet ingredients into dry
Scoop batter into a well greased 6.5 x 4 inch loaf pan (this loaf pan may have been discontinued. Stay tuned…)
Bake at 300° for 45-55 minutes on bottom rack of oven; until a knife comes out clean
Cool and serve
Makes 1 loaf (about 12 slices)

source: http://www.elanaspantry.com/simple-bread/

Homemade Orange Julius

As a kid, I remember going to the mall and getting an Orange Julius. That was before my coffee days. I found this recipe on Pinterest (best website ever) and it makes me want to try it!

Homemade Orange Julius

This recipe requires that you make fresh orange juice “ice cubes” the night before, so plan ahead!

Makes enough to fill 4 tall glasses

Ingredients
2 cups freshly squozen orange juice (see *note* below)
1 cup ice cubes
1 cup Greek yogurt
1 tablespoon honey (more or less to taste)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Directions
Make small orange juice “ice cubes” with 1 cup of the orange juice by filling compartments of an ice cube tray about 1/3 full. Freeze overnight, or even for about 2 hours to get them “slushy.”

Put frozen orange juice cubes, orange juice, and ice cubes in blender. Blend on high until ice cubes break down.

Add yogurt, honey, and vanilla extract. Blend on low speed to combine, then serve.

*note* It took 1 large orange, or 2 smaller Mandarins to make ½ cup of juice, so about 4 large oranges or 8 small ones (Yes! We can do math!)

Source: http://www.tastespotting.com/features/homemade-orange-julius-recipe

Grain-Free Cocoa muffins

In my quest this summer to eat a bit more nutritious I am looking for foods that are easy to make and don’t seem to be a lot of calories. I have this huge appetite which is one of the main reasons for my current weight, as well as having a weak respiratory system and weak ankles any type of exercise was difficult when I was younger. I also get bored easily and hate thinking of doing something for so many reps of the same thing.

I will try this recipe next week and will report on it!

Also hello to my newest follower! I need to figure out how to view followers on blogger.

Source: http://juliamitchell.wordpress.com/2011/02/06/paleo-chocolate-banana-muffinscup-cakes/

What to do with the brown bananas?

Did a Google search found a few good recipes but I wanted one to use up the bananas but also to have a chocolate fix.

So I stated out doing them in muffins, but you need too much mixture.

I would rather have small cupcakes to eat.

Brian just said they were really nice

Ingredients: 1/4 cup Oil

1/4 cup honey

2 eggs

1 cup almond meal

1/2 cup cocoa

3/4 bananas I used 4 small ones

Instructions:

Pre heat Oven

Mix oil, honey and eggs in bowl until light and fluffy. Add almond meal, cocoa powder and bananas and mix well.

You could make a large cake or do what I did and made patty cakes.

They didn’t take long to cook and even less time to eat.

Enjoy