Category Archives: Gluten-Free

Cabbage, Chickpea, and Tomato Soup

Dear Cabbage,

Please accept my sincere apologies for highly underestimating you, for close-mindidly deeming you useful only for cole slaw, and for making you wait months in the vegetable bin before finally putting you to good use.

If only I’d known how when cooked down in a soup you become meltingly tender to a downright ridiculously addictive point, perhaps I wouldn’t have shown such blatant favoritism toward your Brassica cousins. I only hope my ignorance hasn’t caused you too much pain, though if you’d like the name of a good therapist I can happily pass one along.

You’ve no doubt been aware of my recent Ottolenghi obession and how much I’m loving his recipes from Plenty. So please take this as a huge compliment when I say I truly believe the addition of your shredded self greatly improved his recipe for chickpea and tomato soup! See, his recipe was actually for chickpea, tomato and bread soup, which presented a food guilt dilemma on my part (how I hate those). You know how I simply cannot enjoy a bowl of soup without a huge hunk of bread alongside. Olive oil-drizzled, garlic-rubbed bread preferably. So my issue was – if there’s bread in the soup, and alongside the soup (a given), will I have a food guilt (i.e. too much bread) issue? Thus I skipped the toasted bread cubes, rummaged around my produce bins and found you lurking in the back, displaced after a last-minute menu change from a few months back.

Your contribution to this soup was so outstanding that I’d like to give you a title promotion. How do you like the sound of ‘Director of Underrated Vegetables’? Maybe you could work with Parsnip over there, I mean I know the season’s changed and all but there’s gotta be something we can do.

In any case, I hope you’ll at least accept my apology because I’m sure I’ll be seeing you again real soon.

Best, All Seasons Cuisine

P.S. – Buon Appetito!

cabbage, chickpea, and tomato soup

  • 1 large onion, sliced
  • 1 medium fennel bulb, thick outer layer removed, sliced
  • 1/2 head green cabbage, cored, thinly sliced
  • about 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 1 large carrot, peeled, cut lengthwise in half and sliced
  • 3 celery stalks, sliced
  • 1 Tbs tomato paste
  • 1 cup white wine
  • 1 14oz can Italian plum or crushed tomatoes
  • 1 Tbs fresh oregano, chopped
  • 2 Tbs parsley, chopped
  • 1 Tbs thyme leaves
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 2 tsp sugar
  • 4 1/2 cups vegetable or chicken stock
  • salt/pepper
  • 2 1/2 cups cooked chickpeas (canned are fine too)
  • 4 Tbs basic basil pesto (freshly made preferred but store-bought is ok)

1. Heat 3-4 Tbs of the olive oil over medium heat. Add the onion, fennel and cabbage. Season with salt. Saute until cabbage begins to break down and onion begins to soften, 5-7 minutes. Add the carrot and celery and continue cooking another 4-5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in the tomato paste and cook 1 minute. Add the wine and let it reduce 1-2 minutes.

2. Add the canned tomatoes with their juices, herbs, sugar, stock, and some more salt and pepper. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer gently 30 minutes.

3. Add half the chickpeas to a food processor with 2 Tbs olive oil and a pinch of salt. Puree until you have a hummus-like puree. Stir puree into the soup. Add remaining whole chickpeas into the soup and simmer 5 minutes. Taste and adjust seasonings as you like.

4. To serve, remove bay leaves, and ladle soup into bowls and add dollops of the basil pesto.

Serve with toasted garlic bread.

Serves 4-6

Loosely adapted from Ottolenghi’s Plenty

Ottolenghi’s Lentils with Broiled Eggplant

I got a new cookbook! In foodie world, this is considered most exciting news. The concept of ‘foodie world’ amuses me. I often forget that outside foodie world, things like say, Cook’s Illustrated, Tastespotting, or Giada DeLaurentiis, are neither common knowledge nor truly exciting. How sad right? Glad I don’t live there! For instance, the grocery I frequent has Giada coming next week for a book signing and they’ve got flyers at every register advertising the event. And still when I exclaimed to my cashier, ‘Wow, Giada’s coming here?!’ I was met with a blank stare and a puzzled ‘who’? This is what I mean, said cashier needs to take a trip to foodie world.

But I digress. My new cookbook is fantastic! It’s everything I love about a cookbook, mouth-watering photography, inspiring food concepts and a multitude of recipes perfect for each season. And even better, I got this latest cookbook for free! Yep, that’s right. I won a raffle the other week (I know, who does that?) and the prize was a Barnes and Noble giftcard. And in foodie world, is there really any question what one uses a raffle-winning Barnes and Noble giftcard for? Right. Besides I already have the Hunger Games trilogy.

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Black Bean Chili with Butternut Squash

One of the year’s biggest eating weeks in our house doesn’t even take place during the month of December. Or over Thanksgiving. It’s (usually) the third week in February, during which we celebrate both Valentine’s Day and my husbands birthday over the span of a few days. For Valentines I made this Seared Duck Breast over these Peanut Sesame Noodles. A couple nights later (for his birthday) I made the most outrageous Beef Wellington. Then over the weekend I threw a birthday brunch party complete with this mushroom-bacon frittata, baked french toast, and topped it all off with a nice and light German Chocolate Cake. So you could say, it’s time for some detox (I suppose).

Which brings us to the black bean and butternut squash chili, just the ticket after a week of heavy eating. Dried black beans are simmered to tenderness in a smokey-spicy chipotle laced broth with fire-roasted tomatoes. Add cooked butternut squash cubes and your favorite chili garnishes and you have a cleanse in a bowl, no cayenne-cabbage juice-soup concoctions needed. And you’ll get a weeks worth of cleanse-lunches too, because this makes a huge pot of chili.

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Roast Chicken Thighs with Lentil Stew

What is it about winter that makes me want to eat bread all day? Everyday. And pasta too. With garlic bread on the side. I’ve made a bunch of soups these past weeks which I figured would make for healthful lunches (when I make a soup I make like, a bucket of it).  And yes there were healthful lunches, I suppose, if you consider the buttered the roll I ate everyday alongside healthful too. Ah well. And the ironic part is it’s not even been that cold out! Today reached such a balmy 65 degrees that our daffodil bulbs lovingly planted last fall are coming up they’re so confused! So anyway, I needed a meal that was carb-free … ish. And while legumes are technically carbs I guess – (insert scrunched up frowny face here), they’re certainly neither bread nor pasta, which was plenty good enough for me.  The recipe shot to the top of my must-try list.

I’m super glad it did, because this was fantastic! Definitely one of those must-make every season, repeatedly, type recipes. And it’s a simple dish to throw together too. The (abbreviated) rundown – rub colorful red spice with fancy-sounding Spanish name on chicken, bake. Meanwhile, simmer lentils with some stuff. Puree said stuff. Add back to lentils. Serve. OK, maybe I skipped a few minor details, but that’s the rough draft if you will. The point is, it’s not hard. Completely doable on a weeknight. And so rewarding.

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Shrimp Curry with Coconut Milk

In my adventures of self-taught cookery, I’ve had my share of recipe success and epic fail. Though there are two cuisines in particular where the guess-we’ll-order-a-pizza end of the scale weighs a little heavier – Asian and Indian. Perhaps because there are so many spices and exotic ingredients involved, the final product can too easily have that Americanized taste to it or be just plain a la Larry David, ‘eh’. But if you’re craving pizza my friends, then skip this dish because this dish is not eh. This dish is spectacular.

It’s actually a blend of Asian and Indian cuisine, as the lemongrass hints at Thailand while the cumin, coriander and fenugreek are Indian ingredients. And best of all, it is not hard to do. Basically you hunt down (this may well be the hardest part depending on where you live), toast and grind a number of spices, saute some shallot, mix together and add coconut milk. And presto you have a very authentic-tasting nicely spiced curry recipe up your sleeve. If you’re not a shellfish person you could swap in chicken or pork, or spoon the sauce over steamed vegetables with rice.

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Romesco Sauce

This toasted almond and roasted red pepper sauce may look like the Harissa Sauce posted earlier this spring, but the similarities end with the color and roasted red peppers. This Spanish sauce is deeply flavorful, bright and punchy (in an acidic kind of way), and absolutely delicious. It comes together quickly in the food processor and now is the perfect time of year to give this a whirl while both tomatoes and peppers are at their peak.

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Rosemary Mustard Pork with Peaches

Pork is my favorite meat to pair with fruit. In the fall, I love a classic pairing of cinnamon apples with pork chops – a pairing so fantastic I know of some folks who enjoy this year-round! In the winter, stewed cranberries and pork roast grace an elegant holiday table. And in the summer, oh the possibilities are almost endless – blueberries, mango, and here – peaches – become the crowning jewel for a lovely seasonal meal.

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Filet Mignon with Fresh Corn Polenta and Cilantro Pesto

I just love fresh summer corn. I try to sneak it into food whenever I can, and when I can’t we’ll eat it right off the cob bbq-style. It’s sweet, tender, fun to eat, and oh so easy on the budget! The addition of fresh shucked corn to this polenta really summers it up, and drizzled with the cilantro pesto puts a fun southwest-y spin on a typically iconic Italian dish. These flavors just beg for red meat, and here I’ve used filet mignon but simply grilled flank, skirt or sirloin steak would do just as well.

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Mango Salsa

If you’re hosting a bbq or other summertime gathering of hungry folks, add this mango salsa to the menu and your guests will rave. This simple throw-it-together salsa is so fantastic and versatile I already can’t wait to make it again. It wakes up simply grilled meats, makes burgers sing and begs to be double-dipped into by tortilla chips. Serve alongside a roasted tomato salsa and some fresh guacamole and you’ve got yourself a nifty chip n’ dip bar. I used this mango salsa as a topping for lime-marinated pork tenderloin, served with coconut rice and black beans for a Latin-inspired meal. Like the harissa sauce I posted about earlier in the spring, you’ll run out of summer days before you will uses for this delicious stuff.

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Grilled Ancho Chili Flank Steak with Chipotle-Tomatillo Salsa

Rick Bayless does not disappoint. The roasted tomato salsa I made last week was fantastic, as was this Mexican ancho-rubbed grilled flank steak, served with a smoky chipotle-tomatillo salsa. The earthy flavor of the ancho rub paired with the smoky-sweet-hot chipotle salsa is absolute perfection. And it’s so much fun to be grilling outside! I’m telling you, take a break from from the usual, seek out a few not-so-hard-find ingredients and you’ll soon realize you don’t have to go very far to feel like you’re on vacation.

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