vegan mint chocolate chip ice cream

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The soul should be filled with such insatiable love of God that the mind in all its strength dwells continually  in God, captive only to Him.  ~ Saint Silouan the Athonite

This vegan mint chocolate chip ice cream, is absolutely delicious and has become a new favorite.  The base has just four simple ingredients and requires no cooking.  It can be used with any number of different flavors to create any ice cream combination.

You will need an ice cream maker for this recipe and a food processor.  You will want to make sure that your ice cream bowl has been frozen according to the manufacturers instructions so that it is cold enough to make this into ice cream.

Vegan Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream

Ice Cream Base

  • 1 can coconut milk (don’t get coconut cream and look for a brand that has only coconut and water)  I like Native Forest brand and Natural Value
  • 1/2 cup raw sugar
  • 1 cup raw cashews
  • 1 cup water

For Flavoring

  • 2 teaspoons natural mint extract – I use Flavorganics brand : but if you are using a different brand, use one teaspoon and taste before adding more.
  • 1/2 cup dark chocolate chips
  • 2 teaspoons coconut oil

Place cashews and water into a food processor and process on high for 5 minutes or until mixture is very very smooth.  The goal is to get rid of all the cashew chunks.  Depending on your food processor, it may take longer.

Add coconut milk and sugar to the food processor and process on high for another few minutes to totally incorporate.  This should be really creamy.

Pour mixture into a bowl or jar and place in the refrigerator for about an hour.

While this is chilling, add two teaspoons coconut oil into a saucepan over low heat.  Let it melt to coat the bottom of the pan and then add the chocolate chips.  This avoids the chance that your chocolate will seize or get stuck onto the bottom of your pan.  Stir to incorporate as it melts.  Using the coconut oil allows this to still be bitable once its s frozen.  We’ve tried just adding straight chocolate to ice cream.  Good luck trying to chew it without breaking your teeth.

This chocolate sauce can also double as a homemade “magic shell” for your ice cream toppings.

Let the chocolate sauce sit on the counter until ready to use.

Prepare the ice cream

Once the mixture in the refrigerator is completely cooled, pour it into the ice cream maker and begin to churn.  Add the peppermint.

When it is very thick and almost finished, start to drizzle in the chocolate sauce.  It will harden almost immediately but since it is stirring it gets incorporated throughout the ice cream.

This recipe makes enough ice cream for our whole family.  Double it if you want leftovers… Delicious!

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massaged kale salad

massaged kale salad

This Massaged Kale Salad is one of my favorites, especially when there are fresh strawberries in season at the market.  Fresh picked strawberries are a sweet addition to the earthy kale and the citrus dressing.  Kale is a superfood that deserves room on every plate.  Most recipes for massaged kale salads call for green apples or other fruit, but I think the strawberries are the best.  Massaging the kale in an olive oil, lemon and salt dressing has the effect of cooking the kale.  The lemon also makes the iron content in the kale far more bioavailable (that means you absorb more!).

I hope you enjoy this kale salad!

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Massaged Kale Salad with Farm Fresh Strawberries

  • 1 bunch fresh kale, washed
  • 1-1/2 cups fresh organic strawberries (from the farmer’s market is the best)
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil (expeller pressed)
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1/4 cup minced red onion
  • fresh juice of 1/2 lemon
  • optional : 1/2 cucumber, cut into small cubes
  • optional : 1/2 cup toasted sunflower seeds,  slivered almonds or pine nuts
  • optional: 3 teaspoons fresh oregano or marjoram finely chopped

Gather your ingredients.

strawberries and lemon

Stem and chop the kale.   Place in large bowl and drizzle with olive oil, lemon juice and salt.

Massage kale gently with your hands for five to ten minutes.

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Toss with the strawberries, onion and other optional ingredients  (if using).

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Enjoy!

 


chocolate almond banana pudding

ingredients choc banana almond pudding

In case you haven’t noticed, we like pudding!

Only three ingredients, it is a raw, vegan and lenten pudding plus a good protein pick me up.  This is a go to lenten snack in our house and the girls love it.  Amazing as it sounds, there is no added sugar, but you will not miss it.  I promise!  The riper the banana the sweeter the flavor – so let your bananas sit on the counter till the peel is really yellow. No mushy bananas for this recipe though, save those for banana bread!

You don’t need to use almond butter.  It will taste just as good with peanut butter, but with so many peanut allergies these days, I have adapted most of our recipes to use other nuts.  You might even want to try to substitute tahini (sesame) butter.  Different, but yummy!

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Chocolate Banana Almond Pudding

Ingredients

2 ripe bananas

2 tablespoons cocoa powder

4 tablespoons almond butter (raw or toasted)

Place all ingredients in bowl and mash together.  If you have a large crowd of kids, this doubles triples and quadruples nicely!

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lenten chili with guacamole

lenten chili

 This lenten vegetarian chili with guacamole is an easy weeknight favorite and if you end up with leftovers – it tastes even better the day after!

Chili can spark great debates about how it should be eaten.  Whether you like yours on it’s own or with rice, is up to you.  During Lent, we always serve our chili over brown rice.  The reason is a little nutrition combined with traditional know how that amounts to a complete protein on your plate.

There are twenty different amino acids that can form a protein, nine of these amino acids, our body can’t produce on its own.  In order to be considered “complete,” a protein must contain all nine of these essential amino acids in roughly equal amounts. For this reason, these nine amino acids are considered  essential amino acids —we need them in food form because our body can not synthesize these from other available amino acids.   Since proteins are the building blocks of the body this becomes a consideration during long periods of fasting.

The majority of plants and grains do not contain complete proteins; however, meat, dairy, seafood and eggs do.  During long meatless and dairy-less periods it is possible to obtain the necessary protein for our diets through the combining of certain foods.  Traditional and ethnic fasting recipes tend to combine legumes and grains in some fashion.

While it is not necessary to consume complete proteins at every meal, over the course of a day or days it makes a difference.  The following food combinations yield a complete complement of amino acids.

  1. Grains (rice, corn, wheat, barley, etc.) and  legumes (peas, beans, lentils)
  2. Seeds (Sesame or sunflower) and legumes
  3. Hummus and pita
  4. lentils and rice

These are good examples of combining foods such  that all 9 of the essential amino acids are present.

Aside from proper combining of foods, the following are good plant sources of complete protein to include in your diet.

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Quinoa

Buckwheat

Soy (tempeh, sprouted tofu and miso)

Hempseed

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Chia

Soy

Rice and Beans

Now, for the chili.

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lenten chili with guacamole

Ingredients

2 cups of any combination of the following beans : red kidney beans, white kidney beans, black beans, pinto beans

1 onion red or yellow, diced

2 carrots diced.

5 cloves minced garlic

1/4 – 1/2 cup chili powder (we use Penzey’s regular).  Use your judgement here, different chili strengths for different palates.

Salt and pepper to taste

2 chopped red peppers

1 carrot, chopped small

2- 14 oz cans diced organic tomatoes

3 cups water

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The night before, place beans in a bowl and fill to cover with water.  Leave until you are ready to make chili.

chili beans

To make the chili, rinse beans and place in large pot with water to cover.  Turn the heat to high to bring to boil and reduce to medium.  Skim any foam that accumulates.  Cook for an hour.  When the beans are done drain.  You may reserve some of the cooking liquid.

When the beans are almost done (they will begin to soften), saute the onion, red pepper, carrots and chili powder with 3 tablespoons olive oil in a large pot.  Saute for three minutes, until the chili powder becomes fragrant.

Add remaining ingredients.

saute

Cook over  low simmer, with loose lid on the pot,  for approximately 45 minutes.  Check on the consistency, you may cook longer if you like a thicker chili.

Serve over brown rice topped with a hearty scoop of guacamole (2 avocados, 1/2  clove garlic, bunch cilantro chopped, 2 tablespoons red onion chopped, juice of one lime – mash it all together).

yummy.

 

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lenten chocolate pudding

choclate pudding

I know, the picture looks like it could be the beginning of a salad of sorts, but nope.  It’s dessert.

You just have to try this to believe how good it is.  By now almost everyone has made the chocolate tofu mousse, but if you are like our family and cutting down on such a high soy intake during the Fast, then that dessert is out.

This is a a paleo lenten chocolate pudding recipe and the base is bananas and avocado.  Years ago I read that they make an ice cream out of avocado in South America, so making a pudding isn’t too far of a stretch.

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Lenten Chocolate Pudding

Ingredients:

  • 2 ripe avocados
  • 2 ripe bananas
  • 1/4 cup full fat coconut milk
  • 1-4 tablespoons maple syrup (optional – ripe bananas are very sweet, give it a taste before you add)
  • 1/4 – 1/3 cup cocoa powder (Penzey’s,
  • 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • pinch of sea salt
  • optional : pinch of cinnamon

Peel bananas and scoop avocado out of shell.  Place remaining ingredients in a food processor or blender.  Process until creamy.  Place in individual dishes and serve right away or refrigerate.

You can top with toasted coconut, toasted almonds or hazelnuts.

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Simple.  Easy. Delicious.  Everyone wants more lenten chocolate pudding.

 

all done


melomakarona

melomakarona

“Perhaps because they are so rarely made, sweets are the only foods on the islands for which written recipes exist… Each island home always has one or two kinds of cookies in the pantry, such as crunchy ring shaped cookies scented with cinnamon and orange, or simple almond and sugar paste cookies, fragrant with rose water and tangerine juice or zest, or honey drenched melomakarona, the richly aromatic Christmas cookies that are served through the holiday season to the end of January.”

Foods of the Greek Islands – Aglaia Kremezi

Melomakarona are hands down one of our family’s favorite cookies.  Like all things worthwhile, they take a bit of effort, but they never disappoint.  Our family makes melomakarona about once or so during every Fast, usually to take with us for Church coffee hour or as a snack after the Presanctified Liturgy.

This recipe is made with whole wheat flour and while I used the recipe from Foods of the Greek Islands as my starting point, I have tweaked it over the years to incorporate the whole wheat flour and also to minimize the sugar (in this case, the syrup which called for one part white sugar, one part honey and one part water), I didn’t change the amount of sugar in the dough.

You’ll see that in this recipe the melomakarona cookies are drenched in a syrup of only honey and water, scented with orange zest and that it is heated only a little, just enough to thoroughly blend the honey and the water. The reason is that raw honey has enzymes that are beneficial to our bodies which also allows it to metabolize easier.  Once honey is heated over 120 F, the enzymes die and the honey is no different to our bodies than white sugar.

If you would prefer not to use whole wheat flour, substitute and equal amount of pastry flour in it’s place.  We also grind our own flour, which has made all the difference when it comes to whole wheat.  These melomakarona cookies have a nutty mellow flavor – and are very soft and moist.

Grinding your own flour is very simple, and really opened my kids up to the deliciousness of whole wheat.  Whole wheat flour from the store can sometimes have a stale quality, so grinding it fresh and using it within a week (keep in freezer) brings a depth of flavor that we had no idea we were even missing.  Plus you get the fiber and vitamin and mineral content that are missing from refined white flour.

Most grocery stores sell whole wheat in the bulk section.  You’ll want to chose soft white wheat for this recipe.  For grinding, Kitchen Aid has a mill attachment for their mixers, both Blend Tec and Vitamix can grind wheat into four, or you can purchase a flour mill.

 A dear friend, whose parents came to this country from Greece was kind enough to ask her sweet mom for me whether she remembers ever using white flour growing up… because I wanted to be true to the traditions of even how sweets are made.  Her mom remembers using whole wheat…  so it’s an appropriate adjustment.   About a hundred years ago, families would have taken their wheat to the village mill for grinding, and their breads and pastries would have been made from whole white wheat.

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Melomakarona Cookies

Ingredients:

for the dough

  • 1/1/4 cups olive oil (don’t use canola or vegetable, please)
  • 1/3 cup raw turbinado sugar cane
  • grated zest of three oranges
  • 3-4 cups whole wheat pastry flour
  • 2-1/2 teaspoons baking powder (buy brands that say aluminum free on the label)
  • 1-1/2 cups finely ground semolina (Bob’s Red Mill carries it)
  • 1/2 cup brandy (don’t skip this… it imparts an elastic quality to the dough)
  • 1 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 cup fresh orange juice

for the Syrup

  • 2 cups raw honey
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 tablespoon orange zest

for the filling

  • 2 cups walnuts
  • 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

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In a large bowl mix flour, semolina, cinnamon, cloves, baking powder and orange zest.

dry ingredients melomakarona

In a separate bowl, whisk orange juice, olive oil and brandy.  Add to dry ingredients and form into a dough.  Turn out onto a floured surface and knead lightly.  Place back in bowl to rest.  You will notice that the dough has a very elastic quality, not quite like yeast but activated from the brandy.  (Note: the brandy and orange juice will begin to neutralize the phytates in the flour, making the mineral content of the whole wheat assimilable to our bodies.)

Let stand for 20 minutes.

Place walnut and cinnamon filling mixture into a blender or food processor and pulse until ground.

When you are ready to make the cookies, line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and turn the oven on 350F to preheat.

dough melomakarona

To prepare the dough into cookies, we start by scooping out portions and placing them on a cookie sheet.

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To form melomakarona cookies, take a ball of dough and flatten in your hand.  Place a small scoop of the crushed walnut cinnamon mixture into the center and close it up.  Squeeze the seams together and place seam side down on a parchment lined cookie sheet.

forming cookies

Once you have formed and filled all of the cookies, place the leftover walnut cinnamon mixture aside.  You will use this to sprinkle on top of the cookies after they are baked and drenched in the syrup.

ready for the oven melomakarona

Bake in oven for about 30 minutes.  You will know they are done because the house is enveloped in a lovely aroma.

While they are baking, place the honey and water and 1 tablespoon orange zest into a large sauce pot over medium heat.  Stir constantly until just warm.  You should be able to place your finger in it without it feeling hot.  Remove from heat and pour into a 9 x 12 pan.

orange zesty honey syrup

When the cookies are done baking, remove them and place them into the baking dish with the honey syrup.  Let them sit over night.  You may turn them once to get them really saturated.  Most if not all of the liquid will be gone in the morning.  If you have started these cookies early in the day, then let soak for about 5 – 8 hours in the syrup before finishing them.

getting a honey orange marinade

Now you will take the remaining walnut mixture and spoon it atop of each cookie.  Place each one into a large paper cupcake holder.

yum

And now, for the best part…. enjoy your melomakarona!


Lenten sesame truffles

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Everyone likes a snack, and these nutty truffles are a delicious treat to keep on hand during Lent and really any time of the year.  These sesame butter truffles are low in sugar, taste great and also a nice project for the kids.

Over the years we have really tried to cut down our sugar.  When I began studying holistic nutrition and learning about just how depleting sugar is to our bodies I felt compelled as a mom to put that into action in my home.  So, I have steadily been working at drastically reducing the sugar in our recipes, as well as changing the types of sugar we eat.

To give you an idea, we have a coconut cream pie recipe that called for 2 cups of sugar.  Through trial and error, we have settled on just 1/2 cup of sugar  – that is the point the family says, “hey, it’s doesn’t taste right.”

Why reduce the sugar content?  There are a lot of reasons and of course blood sugar swings is just one of them.  In the past hundred years, the average person has gone from from eating just about 2 pounds of sugar  per year, to close to 150 pounds of sugar per year.  That is a massive increase, and it’s questionable whether our pancreas and bodies were designed to handle such an onslaught.  Excess sugar intake can contribute to a weakened immune system, vitamin and mineral deficiencies and increased risk of diabetes and acidity in the digestive tract.  That acidity creates an atmosphere conducive to pathogenic bacteria and yeasts.

Did you know that for every molecule of sugar you consume, your body needs 55 – 65 molecules of magnesium just to metabolize it.  And that’s just magnesium. The digestive demands of sugar leech other vital nutrients from our bodies, such as chromium and copper and also interferes with the absorption of calcium.

Our kids today get sugar in most everything and as a nation we are generally depleted of magnesium, which is necessary to process carbohydrates.  Among other things, deficiencies of magnesium can lead to decreased energy.  Magnesium works together with calcium so that your muscles contract and relax.  So muscle spasms (think charlie horse) can arise from magnesium imbalances.

Paleo recipes recognize that impact of sugar in our health and that’s why you won’t find much sugar in them.  None the less, they are delicious and provide a guilt free tasty treat!

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Lenten & Paleo Sesame Truffles

Ingredients:

  • 4 tablespoons raw tahini paste.  You can get roasted, but it will change the flavor.  See which you like best.
  • 8 tablespoons coconut butter (also called coconut manna)
  • 2 tablespoon unsweetened shredded coconut
  • 4 tablespoons  + 1 teaspoon maple syrup
  • pinch sea salt
  • seeds from two vanilla pods or 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 2 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds for coating
  • 2 tablespoons coco powder for coating.

Melt coconut manna over the stove.  Add softened coconut butter, sesame paste (tahini), maple syrup, sea salt and vanilla bean (vanilla extract) and mix until smooth.

Form into bite sized balls and roll in coco powder or sesame seeds.  Place on a parchment lined cookie sheet or plate and refrigerate for about an hour to set.

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Additional Resources:

 http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/04/20/sugar-dangers.aspx
McBride, N. (2010). Gut and psychology syndrome: Natural treatment for autism, dyspraxia, A.D.D., dyslexia,

A.D.H.D., depression, schizophrenia. Cambridge, U.K.: Medinform Pub.]. (111-112)

Nancy Appleton; G. N. Jacobs. Suicide by Sugar: A Startling Look at Our #1 National Addiction.  Kindle Edition.


Lenten red lentil dahl

 red lentil prep

This is one of my favorite recipes, both during Lent and throughout the year.  It is simple to make, tastes great and everyone loves it.  Serve the red lentil dahl over brown rice, with some warmed whole wheat naan,  and you have an easy weeknight meal that only tastes better as a leftover.

Ginger is a spice which is very healthy for the stomach, and it has a peppery bite to it.  Try to use fresh ginger and grate it with a microplane grater if you have one, otherwise just mince it with a knife.  If you plant your ginger root in a pot and put it on a sunny window, you can grow more ginger root for free!

Red lentils are nutrient laden and restorative to our bodies.  The ginger and turmeric lend anti-inflammatory qualities to this soothing meal.  Although this is an Indian lentil dish, lentils in general  are a traditional meal during Lent.

 

favorite spices

My favorite spices are from Penzey’s  They began as an online store and their spices are very flavorful, but more than that, very affordable.  4 ounces of most Penzey’s costs less than McCormick’s, Spice Hunter and other spice brands at the grocery stores.  So for example, at Walmart, McCormick’s ground cumin costs $4.48 for 1.5 ounces, whereas at Penzeys you’ll spend $5.69 for a 4 ounce bag of a better quality more flavorful cumin.

I have found this to be the same, across the board for all of Penzeys spices.

Lenten Red Lentil Dahl

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Ingredients:

  • 1 cup red lentils (they are actually orange)
  • 4 cups water
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon turmeric powder
  • 1–3 teaspoons grated fresh ginger
  • 2 tablespoons oil or butter or ghee or coconut oil (optional)
  • 1 teaspoon powdered cumin
  • 1 teaspoon powdered coriander
  • 2 medium sized carrots diced (about 1 cup)

 

Rinse red lentils and soak for 2–12 hours.  This step is not as critical with lentils as with larger beans, but it does help to neutralize any phytic acid present in beans and grains.  Phytic acid binds to the minerals in the beans and therefore makes your absorption of these minerals difficult.  Turns out our grandmothers knew what they were doing!  Traditional preparations are generally more nourishing…. even if they do take a little tiny bit more time.

Place all ingredients in a pot or large high rimmed pan.  Bring to simmer and cook for 45 minutes or until liquid has drained.

Serve over brown rice.  My favorite way to make rice for this dish is 2 cups brown rice, 3 cups water, 1 cup coconut milk.  It makes a tasty coconut-ty rice that goes really well with the dal.

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Enjoy.

red lentil dal dinner


panang curry Lenten soup

Tm Kha Gai

A very good tip for the fast, that we discovered some years back, is to make meals that were meant to be vegetarian or vegan in the first place.  We wanted to embrace the fast with joy, as we are taught… but each fake hamburger, or look a-like taco made us just wish we were eating meat.

My first visit to an Orthodox monastery was five or six years ago and it was during Great Lent.  The food on their table was simple and great.  The meals also seemed very traditional – recipes that were meant to be Lenten.  I had my four year old daughter with me.  She loved everything they served!  So the next year, we decided to eat fasting foods that were never intended to contain meat in the first place – a lot are asian or middle eastern or Ethiopian inspired.  We didn’t want fake cheese or burgers or other imitations.  We wanted real food.

Finding  recipes that are meat free to begin with has made a joyful difference at our table.

I hope you will like this delicious Thai coconut panang curry soup.  It is made from simple ingredients – and the vegetables can be rotated to what is in season in your area, or to include any specific varieties that you especially enjoy.

This is the way we like it, if it is too sour, just reduce the amount of lime.

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Ingredients

  • 2 cans coconut milk – Native Forest is a great brand
  • 1/4 red onion diced
  • 1/4 cup lime juice
  • Thai red curry paste – to taste
  • one container firm organic tofu (very important to get organic.  Trader Joes has a fermented organic tofu)
  • 1 cup green beans, ends cut of and sliced into bite sized portions
  • 1 cup chopped portabello or other mushroom you like
  • 1 cup baby bok choy, chopped (about 4 small baby bok chops)
  • 2 inches ginger root peeled and sliced
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 3 cups vegetable broth, plus a little extra to deglaze pan.

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Preparation

Open tofu package and cut into small squares.  Lay these flat on a thick layer of paper towels.  Cover with another thick layer of paper towels.  You can leave it like this, or place a cutting board on top of them.   This is to drain the excess water away.  Otherwise it just gets soggy.

Prepare all of your remaining ingredients and have them by the stove.  This is the step that dramatically changed the results of our cooking.  Having the mis en place staged so that you can concentrate on cooking rather than cutting and watching the stove at the same time reduces the possibility that your dinner will burn.

mis en place

If you have a wok, then this is a good recipe for it.  If not, a large frying pan – well seasoned cast iron or non stick is good.

Over medium heat, add toasted sesame oil and coat the pan.  Add the tofu and cook until the sides are brown,   About five minutes.  Remove from pan and lay on paper towels so that it can drain.

In a soup pot, pour coconut milk, vegetable broth, sliced ginger and lime juice.  Let simmer while you cook the vegetables.

Add mushrooms to wok/frying pan.  Cook over medium heat.  If you are using a wok, move to the side and add the bok choy and green beans.  You’ll want the mushrooms well done, the bok choy and beans still a little crispy.  If it gets dry or if the veggies start to stick, add in some of the vegetable broth.

mushrooms bok choy and beans

With a strainer remove ginger from the broth.  Sample and add salt to taste.

Add one heaping teaspoon of panang curry paste and taste.  I purposely have not added a measurement for the curry, because frankly different brands vary widely in their flavor.  Make this tasty for you.  We actually add the curry straight to the soup bowls, the younger ones don’t want as much so they just get a hint of it.

plating the vegetables

plating the vegetables and tofu

Now you can add all of the vegetables and tofu into the broth, or begin to plate the vegetables into the bowls separately – like we do – and add the broth on top of it.

panning curry soup

Claudia and Kates soup

We plate  the veggies and tofu separately into the bowls because, in my family, we have three girls, some of who like mushrooms and onions and some who don’t.  The one who doesn’t like them, really really doesn’t like them.   So the mushrooms and onions go to the bowls in the measure of how well each one will enjoy it.    Though we have a general rule in our house that you have to try everything,  I have to admit that as a girl, I did not like mushrooms… not at all.

And  during the Fast, well, it just seems better to have mercy and give them what they will like, so that they too will embrace the Fast with joy.

the youngest ones bowl of soup

Erika’s Soup

 

 


lenten winter curry squash soup

curried squash soupThis lenten curry squash soup is born out of several squashes from our CSA box that have just been sitting on the kitchen counter.  You really can use any winter squash variety.  We used a sugar pumpkin, butternut and acorn squash – so this is more of a triple squash soup.

Use whatever winter squash you have on hand, or that you can find in the market.  Kabocha squash would be great in this spiced squash soup too.

A note about the curry paste.  We used to buy our curry paste from the local Thai market (oriental grocery stores have awesome spices).  Sadly, our local Thai market closed.  So for now I am using the Taste of Thai brand.  It is not as spicy and flavorful as the brand in the Thai Grocery, but is still good.

The base of this soup is the vegetable.mineral.broth.  That is why there is no salt in the final recipe.  If you are not fasting, chicken stock will work nicely here too.

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Ingredients:

  • 4-5 pounds winter squash : kabocha, acorn, butternut, pumpkin
  • 1 medium onion chopped
  • 3-4 cups vegetable broth
  • 1 can coconut milk
  • 2 tablespoons red curry (or more to taste)
  • 1 tablespoon cinnamon

Preparation

Preheat oven to 375F.  Cut squashes in half and spoon out seeds.  Place cut side down on a cookie sheet and place in oven.  Bake for one hour or until tender.  Remove from oven and spoon out squash meat into separate bowl.

Sautee onion over medium heat.  Add 2 cups of vegetable broth and cooked squash.  Add spices and coconut milk.  Using an immersion blender, mix the soup until it is entirely pureed.  Check the consistency, add more broth if it is too thick.

Garnish with cilantro, avocado or parsley.

Enjoy.

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Alternatively, you can make this a sage and thyme based soup.  Omit the coconut milk, use an extra cup of vegetable broth and add to the sautéing onions one tablespoon of fresh sage and thyme.

There are so many variations to this soup, play with the ingredients and find what you like best.