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Goat Milk Crumbly Cheese
A friend of mine and her daughter have several goats and this year they began milking them. Every day. Twice a day. Not without a struggle. As they are lacto-ovo vegetarians as well, they don’t use that much milk. However they have experimented with kefir and cheese. Now they are experimenting with giving some milk away.
I have been a lucky recipient of a quart of freshly milked, unpasteurized goat milk. I intended to make cheese out of it, and in the heating for the cheese the milk would become pasteurized.
I’ve learned a little about making cheese, and I’d like to learn more. What I made was an easy acid-based spreadable or crumbly cheese. This requires lemon juice or vinegar added when the heated milk reaches 180 degrees F.
The milk immediately separates into curds and whey.
This is poured through cheesecloth,
then all four corners tied and the cheese suspended over a pot or bowl to drain.
My result was like a dry cottage cheese. I hung it longer than recommended, so perhaps too much moisture seeped away. Then, before I combined it with seasonings, I put it into the refrigerator since I was busy with something else. I think that hardened up the cheese as well. The seasonings didn’t so much as combine with the cheese curds as they just mixed up with them.
That worked out okay. Instead of spreading the cheese on toast, I crumbled it into a vegetable and pasta dish for dinner and it was tasty, as well as a good extra source of protein, and just fun to eat because we had made it from the milk of goats we have met!
A quart doesn’t make much cheese; in fact, it made about half a cup of crumbly cheese.
The whey is a rich souce of nutrition, but is often thrown away. With the acid added to it, it has an unpleasant flavor for drinking. I used it, with the addition of more water, to boil the pasta for the meal, then after it cooled poured it on my outdoor plants. You can use it to replace water in baking or feed it to your chickens… just don’t dump it down the sink!
This recipe is for a quart of goat milk, which doesn’t produce much cheese. Recipes I looked at all recommended a quarter cup of lemon juice, but the cheese curdled for me at no more than an eighth of a cup. Maybe you’ll have different results. You don’t have to hunt down a goatkeeper, either. Goatmilk is sold in supermarkets.
Crumbly Goat Milk CheeseAuthor: Diane C. KennedyRecipe type: Side DishPrep time:Cook time:Total time:Serves: ¼ cupHave a quart of goat milk? Make a little cheese with it!Ingredients- One quart fresh goat's milk
- Up to ⅛th cup fresh lemon juice or vinegar
- Seasonings such as half a garlic clove grated, thyme, Herbs du Provence, etc., and coarse salt
Instructions- Affix a cooking thermometer to the side of a medium saucepan.
- Add goat milk so that the thermometer is submersed in the liquid but not touching the bottom.
- Heat over medium heat until the temperature reaches 180 F.
- Remove pot from heat and gauge from side of pot.
- Stir in lemon juice or vinegar a teaspoon at a time until curds form. You'll know it when it happens! There will be curd and almost clear whey.
- Line a bowl with double layer cheesecloth.
- Pour contents of pot into cheesecloth.
- Tie corners of cheesecloth together over a wooden spoon and allow to hang over bowl or pot to drain.
- Drain cheese one hour or more. The longer you drain it, the more dry it will be.
- Remove cheese from cheesecloth and place in bowl with the seasonings of your choice. Sprinkle with coarse salt.
- Use crumbly cheese on top of hot pasta or vegetables.
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Plummy Skillet Cake
Have a lot of juicy plums that need a place to go?
How about this tasty, light cake baked in a skillet? A cast-iron skillet is perfect for this cake, but you can use any oven-proof skillet or baking dish if you don’t have one. If you are skilled in campfire or Dutch-oven cooking, take this recipe with you when you camp. As an interesting change of seasonings, use the Chinese Five-Spice powder that has been hanging out in your spice pantry since the last time you made stir-fry.
If you don’t have any, use freshly-grated nutmeg or ground cinnamon.
Plummy Skillet CakeAuthor: Diane C KennedyRecipe type: DessertPrep time:Cook time:Total time:Serves: 6Dessert in a cast-iron skillet can be cooked over a campfire instead of your oven. No cast iron? Use an oven-proof skillet or baking dish. You can use other stone fruit instead of plums with just as good a result.Ingredients- 6 tablespoon unsalted butter, room temperature, plus extra for skillet
- 1½ cups all-purpose flour, plus some for skillet
- ¾ teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ¾ teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon Chinese Five Spice powder
- 1¼ cups plus 2 tablespoons sugar
- 2 eggs
- ¾ cup buttermilk
- 4 medium plums, thinly sliced and halved
Instructions- Preheat oven to 375 F.
- Butter a 10-inch cast-iron skillet (or ovenproof skillet or dish).
- Dust skillet with extra flour and tap out any loose flour
- In a small bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, Chinese Five-Spice powder and salt.
- In large bowl, or in a mixer bowl, combine 1¼ cups sugar and butter until creamy.
- Beat in eggs until smooth.
- Add a third of the flour mixture with a third of the buttermilk, until all is combined. Don't overbeat.
- Pour batter into prepared skillet and smooth top.
- Spread sliced and halved plums all over the top.
- Sprinkle with extra sugar.
- Bake 35 minutes until golden brown and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out cleanly.
- Cool for about ten minutes before cutting.
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Savory Carrot Soup
Carrots are a gardening miracle. From such a minuscule seed, out pops a root strong enough to plow through tough soil and soak up minerals.
The carrots shoot those minerals up to the ferny leaves, and when they die, leave the minerals to enhance the topsoil. Carrots fill the roll as one of nature’s miner plants. They are also terrific to eat and very good for you.
I’m sure you’ve heard about how high in beta-carotene carrots are, and how they help eyesight. If you haven’t there are hundreds of Internet references to look up. Carrots are a very versatile vegetable, tasty raw as well as cooked.
There are many carrot varieties. Nantes, Chantenay, Danvers… these are the common varieties you’ll see sold in most seed stores. However there are white carrots, purple carrots, deep red carrots, and carrots of many sizes and shapes. Some are woody, some very sweet, some tender and some strongly flavored.
If you grow your own organic carrots, feel around the roots to see if they are large enough to pull. Don’t leave them in the ground for too long or they’ll become less sweet and woody in texture. Also, if you use your own organically grown carrots, you don’t need to peel them. Just use a brush to scrub off the dirt.
Carrots are wonderful to eat when simply steamed until tender, then buttered or drizzled with olive oil and chopped herbs. Dill is particularly good, as are chives. I’ve found many carrot recipes, but most of them are sweet not savory. Honey-glazed carrots, carrot soup with curry and sweet coconut milk, brown sugar carrots… I don’t care for them. Carrots are naturally sweet, and to slop more sweet stuff on top is overdoing it. Sweetened carrots belong in carrot cake, and there is only one recipe for it that I find not cloying and heavy (I’ll share that recipe with you another time). I also like carrots in a savory soup.
Here is an unusual recipe that is tasty, easy, low in calories, and has protein from an unusual source: vegetarian sausage patties. Celery adds dimension to the flavor as does minced fresh rosemary.
Savory Carrot SoupAuthor: Diane C. KennedyRecipe type: SoupPrep time:Cook time:Total time:Serves: 2This golden, low-fat soup brings out the savory goodness of carrots.Ingredients- About two cups sliced carrots
- One shallot, diced
- One celery stalk, diced
- Two vegetarian sausage patties (such as Morningstar Farms)
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- ½ teaspoon fresh rosemary, minced
- One large potato, peeled and chopped
- Four cups vegetable broth
- Cilantro leaves for garnish (optional)
Instructions- In medium saucepan, heat olive oil over medium-high heat. Add shallot and cook for two minutes.
- Add celery and stir occasionally for about three minutes.
- Move the vegetables to one side and add two vegetarian sausage patties. Flip when cooked on one side.
- Add potato, carrots and rosemary.
- Stir, breaking up sausage patties with spatula.
- Add vegetable broth
- Bring to boil then lower temperature to a simmer and partially cover with the pot lid.
- Cook for about twenty minutes, until carrots are just tender.
- Cool, then blend soup until smooth.
- Return soup to pot and reheat.
- Serve hot, topped with cilantro leaves if used.
Serve this golden orange soup in bowls that compliment it’s color. -
Locro de Papas (Ecuadorian Potato Soup)
A couple of years ago my daughter and I went on a birdwatching ecotour of the cloud forests in Ecuador, and then to the Galapagos islands.
The flights ended and began in Quito, the capital city, which holds about 75% of the entire population of Ecuador. Eating wasn’t as much a challenge as we had anticipated; often in lower economic areas there are better non-meat choices. We stayed at a hotel in Quito at the beginning, middle and end of our journey. Room service was the same price as eating in the restaurant, so we indulged in our room for most meals because we were exhausted. One of the three separate nights we stayed there we watched Lord of the Rings in Spanish. Neither of us really speaks Spanish, but I understand enough to get the gist of what is being said. On our last day the streets were blocked off because the president of Ecuador came to stay in the adjacent hotel and we saw his party board a plane as ours was taking off the next day.
The hotel menu offered interesting side dishes made with interesting ingredients such as yucca and plantain. Our absolute favorite, though, was Locro de Papas. Literally this translates as Potato Stew, but it wasn’t a stew. Locro de Papas is one of the most popular dishes in Ecuador and the Andes. It is wholesome peasant food that has as many variations as Americans have chili recipes. At home I managed to reproduce the version that we fell in love with as best as I could. A few ingredients make the soup special. One ingredient which you may not have on your pantry shelves, but is easily obtained in the Mexican food isle, is annatto, also called ground anchiote. It has a slight flavor and is used to color foods. It is not essential for the success of this soup, but it is a nice addition. They use an oil that is colored with the anchiote seeds, but using the ground spice with olive oil works just fine.
What is essential is ground cumin. Some people can’t stand the smell of cumin, which is slightly reminiscent of dirty socks. However the flavor carries this soup perfectly. Another addition is sliced avocado. Warm avocado is melt-in-your-mouth delicious. Living in Fallbrook, the Avocado Capital of the United States, I have ready access to the many forms avocados can take. Avocado fudge, ice cream and fried avocado slices are all standards of the yearly Avocado Festival. Another addition to this soup which creates a wonderful texture as well as adding protein and calcium, is cubed non-melty cheese. If you are non-dairy, then substitute with cubed firm tofu (which can be added even with the cheese). The textures of the potatoes, cheese and avocado are heavenly.
One of the standards of an Ecuadorian lunch or dinner is an introductory soup, usually vegetarian. We ate some fantastic soups. Instead of bread on one occasion, we were given a bowl of popcorn to sprinkle on our soup. It was great! I’ve included it here.
Be sure to slice the potatoes no less than 1/4 inch thick; if any thinner they will fall apart when cooking.
The version in the hotel had lots of butter in it; I’ve replaced half of it with olive oil, but if you don’t do butter then use all olive oil. The butter’s fat content makes the soup satisfying to the palate.
This is a quick and easy soup. Don’t cheat yourself out of a great meal by not making Locro de Papas!
Locro de Papas (Ecuadorian Potato Soup)Author: Diane C. KennedyRecipe type: SoupPrep time:Cook time:Total time:Serves: 4This version of the favorite soup of South America is quick to make and very filling.Ingredients- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 1 shallot, diced
- 1 pound potatoes, peeled and sliced no less than ¼ inch thick
- ½ tablespoon ground cumin
- ½ tablespoon ground annatto
- 6 cups vegetable broth
- 1 avocado
- 1 cup cubed non-melty mild cheese, such as Queso Fresco
- 1 block firm tofu, cubed (optional)
- Cilantro leaves for garnish (optional)
- 1 cup freshly popped popcorn (optional)
Instructions- In a medium saucepan, heat olive oil and butter over medium-high heat.
- Add diced shallots and cook until translucent, about three minutes.
- Cut potato slices in half and add to pot.
- Stir in cumin and annatto.
- Pour in vegetable broth.
- Bring soup to a simmer and cook, uncovered, for about twenty minutes, until potatoes are just tender enough to part when pressed. Don't overcook!
- Ladle soup into wide shallow soup bowls.
- Add chunks of cheese and tofu (if using).
- Top with sliced avocado.
- Garnish with cilantro leaves and serve immediately.
- Provide bowls of popcorn alongside soup to add as topping (don't add it ahead of time, they become soggy instantly).
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Crazy Pot Salad
Crazy Pot Salad is what my daughter calls a main dish I make because it involves many different ingredients that vary as to availability. It always turns out great, though, which is truly amazing. It is a greens salad that also has cooked items and a balance of flavors, textures and colors that make every forkful slightly different. It involves both cold and hot ingredients, all thrown into the same bowl and mixed together to create a melded warm dinner that is as healthful as it is delicious. It is even good as cold leftovers the next day.
Tonight’s salad was born of the need to eat the mixed salad greens that were overgrowing in the garden. I cut and picked various greens and started from there. To create a Crazy Pot Salad, I keep in mind these components:
Fresh Greens: the more varied the better. Fresh herbs such as dill, basil, chives and cilantro, along with arugula and a lettuce mix, work well. Don’t forget some iceberg for crunch. If you don’t have or want to use iceberg (a much maligned vegetable) then cut up fresh celery.
Protein: Tofu, soy chicken strips (such as Morningstar Farms), soy bacon, soy tuna, etc. Beans such as garbanzo or Northern white work well. Using a couple types of proteins are tastier and more nutritious. Cook the protein and use hot.
Starch: Pasta in small shapes, rice, or a cooked grain such as quinoa. Use the starch hot.
Other additions: diced carrots, steamed tiny potatoes or potato chunks (hot), feta or cotija cheese (crumbly), marigold petals, nasturtium blossoms, squash blossoms, capers, heart of palm, mushrooms, pea pods, avocados, green beans fresh or cooked… whatever you have that you need to use. Look for colors to add. I can’t stand Bell peppers, but that is usually the go-to choice when people want to add color to anything. You can avoid the Bell pepper taste-takeover of your salad if you want with a little creativity. Stir-fry up some chopped red cabbage and throw it in with some raw carrots.
Crunch: Nuts, such as pignoli (pine), cashews, sunflower seeds or almonds. Toast them in a little olive oil or in the toaster oven to bring out their flavor.
Dressing: This salad just about makes its own dressing. I like to make Italian dressing with a packet of Lowry’s Italian dressing mix, using red wine vinegar and olive oil. Or I make the dressing as I cook, which I’ll include in the recipe. The cooked shiitake mushroom gives the olive oil a deep, savory note and adds a very interesting flavor and texture. Along with the pignoli nuts, chives and crumbled soy bacon, this makes a delicious subtle dressing that is mixed into the salad rather than adorned on the top. The hot starch, including the potatoes, will readily absorb the hot flavored olive oil.
Remember, this is a salad of opportunity; use what you have and what you love, but keep in mind the different components, the shapes and colors of the ingredients, the texture and nutritional value. Bland foods such as the potato will balance strongly flavored ones such as arugula.
Crazy Pot SaladAuthor: Diane C. KennedyRecipe type: Main Dish SaladPrep time:Cook time:Total time:Serves: FourThis warm combination of greens and other ingredients make a balanced, delicious healthy main dish that can change with what you have available.Ingredients- One cup quinoa, prepared with vegetable broth following box directions
- Four cups (approx.) mixed fresh greens washed and torn into bite-sized pieces
- Two sprigs each fresh dill, basil, chives and cilantro, chopped
- One cup torn iceberg lettuce
- Three calendula flowers and four squash flowers, torn into small pieces (just petals)
- Eight very small potatoes
- Cotija cheese (or veggie substitute. Dairy can be optional)
- Half an 8-oz can garbanzo beans
- Two small carrots, sliced into discs
- One tomato, diced
- A tablespoon olive oil (flavored, if you have it)
- One package Morningstar Farms Chicken Strips
- For Dressing:
- Six fresh shiitake mushrooms
- Four strips Morningstar Farms soy Bacon Strips
- Three tablespoons pignoli nuts
- ⅛th cup olive oil
Instructions- Prepare quinoa in medium saucepan using vegetable broth, according to the instructions on the box.
- Steam small potatos until tender
- Meanwhile, wash, dry and tear up fresh greens, herbs, iceberg and flowers. Put in large bowl.
- Crumble about four tablespoons Cotija cheese over greens in bowl.
- Add garbanzo beans
- Add carrot discs
- In frying pan, heat a tablespoon of olive oil and stir-fry the soy chicken strips until browned (if you have flavored olive oil, such as citrus or basil, use that to cook these).
- Add hot soy chicken strips to bowl.
- In same frying pan, heat ⅛th cup olive oil on medium high.
- Chop shiitake mushrooms and add to frying pan.
- Cook mushrooms on medium-high heat until they are almost crunchy.
- Add soy bacon strips and pignoli nuts.
- Stir nuts until they are browned (watch so they don't burn).
- Flip bacon and remove when browned.
- Pour contents of pan on mixture in bowl.
- Crumble bacon strips and add to bowl.
- Add steamed potatoes, quartered to bowl.
- Add quinoa to bowl.
- Toss contents of bowl until well mixed. Heavy ingredients will sink to the bottom, so be sure to mix well.
- Plate the salad and garnish with chopped tomatos and more cheese, if using.
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Plantain Chips, or Tostones
A couple of years ago my daughter and I enjoyed a five-day birding tour of the high country in Ecuador, then an eight-day tour of the Galapagos islands. Being vegetarian wasn’t a challenge there; we ate very well and enjoyed foods that we hadn’t encountered before. One of the foods that was in many meals was plantain. Plantain around here means the lawn and stream-side weed that helps treat stinging nettle and insect bites. However plantain the fruit look like bananas, but are prepared very differently. High in iron, potassium and fiber, they are very versitile and often used in recipes instead of potatoes.
Plantains can be used in three stages of ripeness. When they are green they are starchy and hard to the touch. They are often boiled and mashed like potatoes. When they are yellow, they are sweeter as the starch has converted to sugar, but still not soft and are difficult to peel. When they are black, but not mushy, they are sweetest.
A common snack in South America and also in Africa are plantain chips. In Ecuador they are called tostones and sold in bags like potato chips. They are very easy to make, and very yummy to eat. Photos follow the recipe.
Plantain Chips, or TostonesAuthor: Diane KennedyRecipe type: SnackPrep time:Cook time:Total time:Serves: 2-3Fruit snack chip found in South America and Africa.Ingredients- Three plantains, yellow or slightly black
- Oil for frying
- Salt.
Instructions- Boil a small pot of water and submerge the whole unpeeled plantains for several minutes. The skins may begin to crack.
- Remove from boiling water and allow to cool.
- Peel the plantains and slice into ¾ inch disks.
- Heat enough oil on medium-high heat in a large skillet to cover the bottom.
- Lay sliced plantains in the oil and fry for about three minutes. They will be soft. Remove from oil and place on a plate lined with paper towels.
- Keep the oil temperature the same.
- Using the bottom of a glass, flatten the softened plantains so that they are very thin. Sliding a metal spatula under each chip when smashing helps. (A Puerto Rican version has you dip the disks into cold water just before refrying, to make them crisper. It would also make the oil splashier.)
- Lay the flattened disks back into the oil and fry for another three minutes or so.
- Remove the now crisp disks to a paper towel for draining.
- They will crisp even more as they cool slightly.
- Eat as is, or lightly salt, or sprinkle with chili-lime powder.
- They are very good with dip, too.
- Makes about thirty chips.
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Taking the “Ew!” out of Tofu
I’ve been an ethical vegetarian for seventeen years, raising both my children without animal protein as well. Believe you me, packaged vegetarian foods have come a looonng way in palatability. There is a whole new world of packaging rife with misspellings and quotation marks, such as “chickn” and “bakon”, just to make sure that no hen or pig will sue the company for false representation. Many vegetarian options were simply god-awful to eat; some still are. It is still hard to find products that aren’t filled with pieces of red and green peppers (ick!), whose flavor permeate the rest of the food making it disgusting if it had been palatable at all in the beginning.
There are wonderful meat substitutes that can vary a menu and add protein, and the ability to create mock meat has become an art and can be found in many restaurants, especially Thai or Chinese. I order several times a year from May Wah in New York, who sells mock meats created in Taiwan. Morningstar Farms makes wonderful standards such as fake bacon, sausage links and patties, chicken strips and meatless crumbles (like ground beef).
When my daughter and I toured England four years ago, the popular vegetarian option on all the menus that year was mushroom risotto. We ate quite a lot of mushroom risotto, as well as some very strange stuffed onions which were stuffed… with more onions.
Although there are many interesting varieties of fake meats, the least expensive and easiest way to provide extra protein to your diet (other than beans, kale and dairy products, etc.) is to learn how to prepare tofu.
Tofu is prepared soybean curd. It comes either in a water bath tub which must be refrigerated or in asceptic pouches which can be stored at room temperature. On the label you’ll see that it comes in ‘soft’, ‘firm’ and ‘extra firm’ for different uses. Most beginners at eating tofu say that it has no flavor and it just soaks up the gravy and seasonings it is cooked with. Not so. Fresh tofu has a delicate, fresh flavor that is available to a palate that is not overly spoiled by too much salt and seasonings.
I’ve grown to like the soft tofu as much as the firm, cooking it so that the outside has a crisp texture and the inside is smooth, and that is the recipe I’ll give to you shortly. For those who want something chewier, there is a great trick to make tofu more meat-like. Freeze it! This works best with firm or extra-firm tofu that is in a water bath tub. Freeze it, then thaw it out, press out the water, slice it however you want and throw it into whatever you are making. It is much more like a sponge and has more texture.
For fresh or thawed tofu, you should drain it. Pressing it is easy and can be done while you are gathering the rest of the ingredients for your meal. Just put a plate on top of a cake of tofu, which is on a cutting board or plate by a sink, and set a heavy can or two on top.
You’ll be amazed at how much water runs off. If you happen to own a Japanese pickle press (you don’t? Oh, you should!) it is really easy to press tofu.
I bought mine at Green Apple Japanese Market in Oceanside for about five dollars. The screw press holds the vegetables down into the brine, or acts as a torture device for tofu. If you press thawed tofu, it’s texture becomes so spongy that it doesn’t easily fall apart and you can squish it down pretty far! It’s fun!
A simple way to prepare tofu is to press it for no less than five minutes, slice it, and pan fry it.
I use a combination of olive oil (because it is one of the most recommended foods that you can eat, and you should have about two tablespoons a day!), sesame oil for flavor, and a product called Bragg’s Amino Acids. It is similar to soy sauce or tahini sauce, but is far less salty and very healthy, providing extra amino acids to your diet. I buy it at health food stores such as Henry’s Marketplace.
If you aren’t going to go run out and buy some right now (whyever not? Pick up a pickle press while you’re out!) use a little tahini sauce, or very lite soy sauce. As these sauces cook, the salt condenses and overpowers the flavor of the foods. So, to one cake of sliced tofu, I put about two tablespoons olive oil, half a tablespoon sesame oil and one tablespoon Bragg’s Amino Acids in a frying pan and heat it to medium-high. I mix them together to cover the bottom of the pan and set in the tofu slices. The more moisture in the tofu, the more it will splatter, so I turn up the heat a little more after setting the slices in the pan. I also use a splatter guard.
The slices should sizzle. Cook for about ten minutes, then turn them for another five. They should be light brown. Add them to vegetables, serve them seperately or top a bowl of noodle soup with them. A varient on this recipe is to use extra-firm tofu, well drained, sliced into smaller pieces and cooked at a higher temperature for a little longer. The pieces become crispy… mmmmm!
You can add soft tofu into smoothies or puddings, or scramble them to make something that really doesn’t taste at all like eggs but can be very tasty as well as nutritious with the right seasonings.
So don’t be afraid of your tofu. Buy it as fresh as you can (there is a tofu maker in San Diego!) and play around with it. Look for tofu that specifies non-GMO soybeans. There are so many ways to prepare it, but this method is quick and simple for busy people, and very tasty, too!
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Homemade Ginger Beer
I remember drinking bottled ginger beer on the rare occasions that my mother allowed us to drink soda. It’s strong gingery, spicy taste was wonderfully refreshing. I hadn’t had it for years until lately, when a friend brought some to a picnic. The kind she brought was from a small brewer and it had a richer flavor to it than what I remembered. Apparently ginger beer, which doesn’t have to contain alcohol, has made a resurgence in popularity. Some is carbonated, and some is fermented or has alcohol added.
My friend remembered her mother making a big, cloudy, thirst-quenching batch of it, but didn’t have her recipe. I had found some recipes and she and I made different batches, her with more success.
What I learned was that fermented ginger beer relied on wild yeast and was traditionally brewed in Europe by passing on the starter. World War Two was the death of the tradition.
I tried a batch of ginger beer hoping to catch wild yeast spores, but it didn’t work. I also tried a batch adding brewer’s yeast, but that didn’t work either. I made a batch with brown sugar and spices that was slowly added to day by day for a week. The results were not what I was looking for. The brown sugar was too sweet and didn’t complement the ginger flavor, and the drink itself too sharp to be pleasant.
The best recipe so far, which my friend made with success, was of course the easiest. It is from Martha Stewart Magazine, and except for the shredding of the ginger, very easy to make. It has only four ingredients.
Homemade Ginger BeerAuthor: Martha StewartRecipe type: BeveragePrep time:Total time:Serves: 16A tasty, non-alcoholic old-fashioned drink.Ingredients- 2 pounds fresh ginger root (get the plumpest you can find or it will be fiberous and hard to cut)
- 1 gallon boiling water
- 1½ cups freshly squeezed lime juice (about 8 limes. Yellow limes are just limes that are ripe and are much jucier).
- 1½ cups white sugar
Instructions- Cut ginger root into 1-inch pieces and place in bowl of a food processor or Vita-Mix, and process until finely chopped. If you have neither machine, you can use a grater with the largest holes, but watch your fingers!
- Transfer the chopped or grated or shredded ginger to a large pot or bowl
- and add the boiling water.
- Allow to stand for one hour, or overnight.
- Drain through a fine sieve. If you would like the drink less cloudy, line the sieve with a double thickness of damp cheesecloth. Compost the solids or spread them on the ground around your plants for mulch.
- Add lime juice and sugar, stirring to dissolve.
- Serve over ice, or plain, or mixed with orange juice, or whatever suits your fancy. Refrigerate to store. I poured mine into mason jars. Stir or shake before serving. Makes 16 cups.
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How to Cook Swiss Chard
Swiss chard is that bright green leafy vegetable, usually with a red mid vein, that most people inch past in the supermarkets. It looks so darn healthy it is scary, and also looks complicated and possibly bitter. I’ve been growing chard for years. One of the easiest of plants to grow from seed, this perennial in our San Diego climate reseeds itself if you let it. To harvest you cut off all the leaves except a few in the middle (to keep the plant producing food for itself). You can easily feed off of a few of these plants for years.
Chard is Mediterranean, not Swiss, but wherever its from it comes packed with antioxidants and many other great health benefits. There is the most common red veined chard that you see in the supermarket, and there is also white or yellow veined varieties. If you buy a package of seeds called Bright Lights, it contains seeds for a mixture of these. The taste difference is negligible, and since in preparing chard you usually strip the mid vein out, it really doesn’t make much difference except as color variety in the garden.
You can cut the leaves while very young and add them directly to lettuce mixes for salads, especially wilted salads. Or you can stir-fry them up or use them as you would baby spinach. The wonderful thing about chard is that you can use the old leaves as well. Older chard takes a little longer to prepare, but oh, it is worth the effort. To prepare older leaves, I fill half the kitchen sink with water, then with my fingers or a sharp knife, strip the green away from the mid veins and drop the greens into the water.
Wash the greens well. If your garden doesn’t have a lot of mulch around the plants, then there might be soil kicked up on the leaves. Also, look out for any freeloaders such as snails or earwigs. I usually soak the leaves for a while, letting any thing extra float to the top or sink, then drain and rinse again. Squeeze the extra liquid from the greens and you are ready to cook.
If you want to freeze the chard for later, boil water in a big pot (depending on how much chard you have; you can do it in batches, too), then blanch the greens by briefly submerging them in the boiling water, fishing them out and bathing them in cold water to stop the cooking process. Dry the greens and freeze in containers.
This is my recipe for cooking chard, which my kids and I have loved for years. You can prepare it this way and eat directly, or use it as filling for enchiladas, frittatas, empanadas, or any other tas or das you may desire! Photos follow the print version of the recipe.
Chard SauteAuthor: Diane C. KennedyRecipe type: Side DishPrep time:Cook time:Total time:Serves: 4-6Swiss chard is easy to grow and a little more involved to prepare, but oh! how it is worth the effort!Ingredients- 2 tsp olive oil
- 1 large shallot (or half an onion, or a clove or two of garlic)
- ¼ cup vegetable broth or water
- 2 large bunches Swiss chard (or more)
Instructions- Wash, wring out, de-stem and chop large chard leaves.
- In a large saute pan (that is a frying pan with high sides), heat two tablespoons olive oil to medium high. Or, if doing a mondo-huge pile of chard, use a pot.
- Chop one large shallot, or half an onion, or a clove or two of garlic and add to pan.
- If using onion, then allow to cook for a few minutes until softened.
- Add wrung-out Swiss chard and stir a little.
- Add a quarter of a cup of vegetable broth (the greens will still hold water, so you don't need much broth. Or you can add the same amount of water).
- Cover the pan and reduce heat to low.
- Allow chard to steam for about twenty minutes (it should be simmering in there; if it isn't, turn up the heat a little).
- Lift the lid once and stir chard.
- At the end of the cooking time, remove the lid and turn up the heat.
- Allow any extra broth to cook until almost completely gone. Be careful not to scorch!
- Remove from heat, adjust the salt to taste, and serve. I eat it with butter, or sprinkled with Parmesan cheese is also good. Yum!!
Chard Saute
In a large saute pan (that is a frying pan with high sides), heat two tablespoons olive oil to medium high. Or, if doing a mondo-huge pile of chard, use a pot.
Chop one large shallot, or half an onion, or a clove or two of garlic and add to pan.
If using onion, then allow to cook for a few minutes until softened. Add wrung-out Swiss chard and stir a little. Add a quarter of a cup of vegetable broth (the greens will still hold water, so you don’t need much broth. Or you can add the same amount of water). Cover the pan and reduce heat to low. Allow chard to steam for about twenty minutes (it should be simmering in there; if it isn’t, turn up the heat a little). Lift the lid once and stir chard.
At the end of the cooking time, remove the lid and turn up the heat. Allow any extra broth to cook until almost completely gone. Remove from heat, adjust the salt to taste, and serve. I eat it with butter, or sprinkled with Parmesan cheese is also good. Yum!!