Tuesday, 6 August 2019

Easy Jerk Shrimp

This is a very easy way to make jerk shrimp at home using any of the prepared wet jerk seasonings that are available (Spur Tree, Walkerswood, Grace etc). It is done in "Bunjay" style, which is frying the seasoning in a little oil until it starts to clump together, dries out a bit, then adding the shrimp and sauteing some more until the seasoning becomes slightly charred and sticks to the shrimp. Great as an appetizer or as a meal with salad.
10-12 large shrimp, cleaned and deveined
2 tablespoons Jerk seasoning of your choice
1 tablespoon Pickapeppa Sauce
1 tablespoon oil
Directions
Heat the oil in a large non-stick frying pan or wok. Add the jerk seasoning and pickapeppa sauce and saute until the seasoning starts to clump together and the flavor is released. Add the shrimp and stir fry until the seasoning starts to stick to the shrimp and they turn pink. Keep stirring until most of the seasoning has stuck to the shrimp. Plate and enjoy.

Tuesday, 18 June 2019

Blueberry Oat Breakfast Squares

These breakfast squares are based on my original oat squares. Decided to try using blueberries since they are in season. This required some tweaking of the original recipe but they are really good and filling. Also, not too sweet. To freeze and reheat, I wrap each square in foil, and then put them in a freezer Ziploc bag. When I know I'll have one for breakfast, I take it down the night before and put it in the refrigerator. To reheat, remove the foil, wrap in a damp paper towel and warm in microwave for 5 minutes and 30% power.

    1/2 cup maple syrup
    1 tablespoon molasses
    1 cup butter
    1/4 cup brown sugar
    2 eggs
    1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
    1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon allspice
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
    1/2 teaspoon salt
    1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
    1 1/2 cups old fashioned oats
     ½ cup oat bran
     1/3 cup unsalted, raw pumpkin seeds
    3/4 cup whole wheat flour
    ¾ cup all-purpose flour
    ½ cup flax meal
    ½ cup Greek Style yogurt
    ½ cup half and half (or buttermilk)
    1 teaspoon vinegar (omit if using Buttermilk)
    2 tablespoons Arrowroot Flour
    1 cup fresh or frozen Blueberries
1.      In a bowl, mix together the oats, pumpkin seeds, oat bran, flax meal, spices, flours, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Add the blueberries to the flour mixture so that they are coated with the flour. This helps prevent them from sinking to the bottom of the batter.
2.      In a large saucepan, melt together the butter, half and half, molasses, vanilla, sugar, and maple syrup. Bring to a rolling boil and cook for 5 minutes until the mixture thickens enough to coat the back of a wooden spoon. Set aside to cool.
3.      Whisk eggs, and yogurt, mixing well.
4.      Add the cooled butter mixture, whisk, then add the oats, blueberries, oat bran, flax meal, cinnamon, flours, baking soda, salt. Add the vinegar then mix with a wooden spoon until incorporated.
5.      Spread mixture in a parchment lined 8x8 inch baking dish. Make sure the parchment paper overhangs on all sides.
6.      Bake in a 350° oven for about 1- 1 1/4 hours until top is golden brown and a tester inserted comes out clean. The finished product should be firm to touch. Cut into 8-12 squares (depends on preference) when cool.


Monday, 10 June 2019

Pickled Bitter Melon (Foo Gah)

I love pickles....with anything! Bitter Gourd is a vegetable used in Asian countries in a variety of ways. It's supposed to have health benefits. I have never had it pickled so decided to try doing that. As its name suggests, the vegetable is very bitter so one has to "treat" it in a variety of ways to get rid of the bitterness. I salted it, then soaked it in vinegar and water overnight, before pickling it and waiting about 3-4 days to taste it. The results are pretty good. It's a combination of sweet, bitter, acid, and slightly salty. It's a great pickle to go with fish dishes.
2 Bitter Melons (pick the ones that are pale in color and blemish free. If there are slight blemishes, slice them away)
1/2 cup pickling salt
Equal portions of vinegar and water to soak overnight
Brine
1 part white vinegar
.75 part of white sugar
1/8 teaspoon Pickle Crisp Granules
Directions
1. Wash the melons and cut the top and bottom off. Cut in half lengthwise and remove the white pulp and seeds with a spoon. Remove as much of the white pulp as you can without breaking the semi-lunar shape of the vegetable.
2. Cut into 1/4 inch slices and put in a bowl. Mix in the pickling salt and let the salt draw out the water and bitterness. This takes about 4-6 hours.
3. Put in a colander, drain, and rinse off the salt well. Pour boiling water over the pieces and then immediately rinse again with cold water.
4. Make a mixture of equal parts of water and vinegar, and place in a bowl with the sliced bitter melon. Cover and refrigerate covered, overnight.
5. The next day, drain the vegetables well, put in a sterilized mason jar and prepare the pickling liquid. Mix 1 part of white vinegar with .75 part of sugar (1 cup vinegar with 3/4 cup water). Add the Pickle Crisp granules and stir over low heat just until the sugar is dissolved Make enough liquid to cover the pickles in the jar. Do not boil. Pour the mixture over the vegetables in the jar, cover and refrigerate. Leave for about 3-4 days before tasting. They will keep in the fridge for a while.

Saturday, 8 June 2019

Kind of like Kind Bars

These are pretty amazing nut bars that are very delicious. Requires a bit of effort but the end result is worth it. I made them thick but for a thinner bar, use a larger baking tin, maybe somewhere between an 8 inch X 8 inch and a 9 inch X 13 inch. 9x11 is perfect! The recipe is very flexible in that you can use the nut mixture of your choice, even adding a few chocolate chips or butterscotch morsels as well. The Rice Syrup is the constant as it is an integral part of the "glue" that holds the bar together. Other syrups do not substitute well.If you like the bars to be sweeter, add another tablespoon or two of rice syrup.

½ cup raw, unsalted Almonds, cut in half
1 cup of more coarsely chopped Almonds (a quick pulse in a food processor does this)
1 ½ cups coarsely chopped walnuts
½ cup unsalted Sunflower seeds
¾ cup shelled, unsalted pumpkin seeds
½ cup sesame seeds (you can substitute a puffed cereal like quinoa, millet for this. Puffed wheat grains are too big)
¼ cup Flax Seed meal
1 tablespoon Oat Bran cereal
2 tablespoons Flax or Chia Seeds (your preference)
½ cup Old Fashioned Oats
3 tablespoons oil of your choosing (vegetable, coconut, olive, grapeseed etc)
4 tablespoons rice syrup (you can also use Barley Malt syrup but that gives a stronger, more distinctive taste
“Glue” Mixture
1 cup dried cranberries
2 tablespoons rice syrup (I sometimes add a tablespoon of molasses too if I want a darker bar)
2 tablespoons of oil of your choosing
1 teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon of vanilla
Directions
1.      Preheat oven to 300 degrees Fahrenheit. Cut a square of parchment paper that is larger than the baking pan or dish that you have selected to use. There must be overhang of the paper on all sides.
2.      Place the more coarsely chopped Almonds in a sieve and pour boiling water over them. Allow to drain completely.
3.      Mix the rice syrup and oil with the nut/seed/oat mixture and spread that over a large baking sheet, again lined with parchment paper (a lot of parchment paper but makes clean up easier). Bake in the oven for about 25 minutes, turning 2-3 times to prevent burning (nuts will do that in a flash, so be careful).
4.      For the “Glue”, combine, cranberries, rice syrup, oil, salt, cinnamon, and vanilla, and pulse in a food processor until it is a smooth paste.
5.      Now comes the “difficult” part, combining the “glue” and the nuts! It’s easy with a wooden spoon but does require a lot of effort as the cranberry mixture has a similar consistency to  a thickset mortar for tiling. It’s also easier if the nuts are still warm from the oven. Try to combine both together so that it looks uniform and there are no “islands” of “glue” remaining in the mixture. You could also use clean hands to do the mixing but that is really “yukky”!
6.      Place the mixture in the parchment lined pan and press down firmly (I use a square of wax paper cut to size and then press the mixture down with that, using my hands to ensure a good compression.
7.      Bake at 250 degrees Fahrenheit for about 30-35 minutes. Let the mixture dry out in the oven until its no longer sticky to touch
8.      Remove from the oven and cut into squares when cool

Simple Oatmeal Pudding

This is a really delicious baked oatmeal pudding that's really simple to make. Unlike a lot of other baked oatmeal recipes, this has a softer, more pudding like consistency. It freezes well and to reheat, remove from freezer the night before, allow to defrost in fridge overnight, then gently warm up in the microwave. It is full of good breakfast stuff and makes for a very filling substitute to the usual bowl of oatmeal.

1 1/4 cup old-fashioned oats, uncooked
1 cup Scottish oatmeal
1/4 cup flax meal
2 tablespoons Arrowroot Flour
1/2 cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons molasses
¼ cup Maple Syrup
2/3 cup dried cranberries (or other dried fruits. See directions below for chopping or leaving whole)
1/3 cup chopped walnuts
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon allspice
1 teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon fine sea salt
2 large eggs
1 medium Granny Smith or other slightly tart apple, peeled and finely shredded
Juice from 1 lime or lemon
2 cups milk
1 1/3 cups half and half
4 tablespoons butter +2 tablespoons for greasing Pyrex baking dish
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

1.      In a large bowl, combine the oats, oatmeal, chopped cranberries, chopped nuts, cinnamon, allspice, flax meal, baking powder, coconut, soda, and salt. 
2.       Mix the sugar, maple syrup, butter, vanilla, and molasses with the milk and half and half. Bring to a low simmer, mixing well to dissolve the sugar. Cool in fridge.(If you want to leave the dried cranberries whole, add them to the milk mixture without chopping. The cranberries will plump up as they absorb liquid).
3.       Finely shred the apple and mix with the lime juice
4.       Whisk the eggs, and add the cooled milk mixture to this. Add the shredded apple mixture
5.       Pour into the bowl with the dry ingredients, and mix well. Then pour all into the prepared 8 inch by 8 inch baking dish (I microwave the butter to melt then swirl it around the baking dish to coat it), using a spatula to distribute the solids evenly. However, I also sometimes use a large square of parchment paper, large enough so that the edges overhang the sides of the baking dish. Once the mixture is poured directly into the lined baking dish, it will take the shape of the dish, and makes removal after baking much easier. Refrigerate for a few hours or overnight for the dry ingredients to absorb the wet mixture. 
6.       Bake for 55 to 65 minutes at 350 degrees Fahrenheit, in a water bath, until the center is set, firm to the touch, and a cake tester inserted comes out relatively clean (there may be some liquid on it but that will be absorbed as the baked oatmeal cools). To get a nice "crust" on top, place under the broil element for 5-7 minutes, watching carefully that it does not burn. Let cool. If you have used the parchment paper technique described earlier, lift the "pudding" out of the dish by the parchment paper. Place on a cutting board, and cut into large squares, approximately the amount that would fill a breakfast. I got about 8 squares.