For the love of Produce...
Replies
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Does anyone know how to cook choi sam? We had it at a Vietnamese restaurant and thought it was great so bought some. First attempt I blanched by putting it in a colander and pouring a kettlefull of boiling water over it followed by a stir fry. Stems were okay but the leaves were chewy and stringy. Second time I blanched for a minute in boiling water, drained well and stir fried. Better than last time but still kind of tough and stringy.
Who knows how to stir fry this vegetable? I love the flavour but am struggling to get a palatable texture. Or is this a shopping problem (young shoots vs old plants) rather than a cooking problem?
I wonder if one could cook it as some do asparagus, standing upright in a narrow-ish pot, so that the stems get some simmering/boiling, the leaves just a steaming (with potentially some control over the steam via lid/no lid). Haven't done this, just speculating. I'm lazy, I usually cut thick stems out of leafy veggies, and start them before the leaves. Not as pretty, though. 😉2 -
The really strange thing about the choi sam was that the first time I did a very short blanch, and stems were file but leaves were unpleasantly chewy. The second time with the longer blanch the leaves were nice but the stems were stringy. Completely againt my intuition.2
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I can't believe there were artichokes at the greengrocer's today. And only £1 each. Probably not good for carbon footprint karma.
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Happy Halloween.
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Vegetable pie w spinach, radicchio, egg, and feta cheese.
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snowflake954 wrote: »Vegetable pie w spinach, radicchio, egg, and feta cheese.
What is your crust, @snowflake954? It's hard to tell from a photo, but it looks more bread-like than a pastry crust, but "shorter" (more fat) perhaps than a bread variant. (Perhaps I'm misreading it, but it looks really yummy - as does that filling - so I'm curious.)2 -
Necessity mother/ingenuity.
Haven’t grocery shopped yet after being away.
Pea shoots from my garden, golden beet carpaccio as plate base.
Chopped snap peas, mandolin purple carrot oblique cut, matchstick persimmon from said garden. Dill because needed to use up. Avocado, poorly plated bc cutting around not great bits.
Matchstick persimmon from my yard.
Pepita/sunflower sprinkle.
Pile of dry oil cured olives in the fancy herb mix because bougie.
Beet is vinegar cured in my fave local white honey balsamic.
Tahini dressing.9 -
snowflake954 wrote: »Vegetable pie w spinach, radicchio, egg, and feta cheese.
What is your crust, @snowflake954? It's hard to tell from a photo, but it looks more bread-like than a pastry crust, but "shorter" (more fat) perhaps than a bread variant. (Perhaps I'm misreading it, but it looks really yummy - as does that filling - so I'm curious.)
Hi Ann, I buy the crust--the ingredients on the package are: flour, sunflower oil, water, salt, yeast, concentrated lemon juice. Calories: 394 per 100g. The package was 230g total. Cut in 6 pieces the portion of crust is 151 cal. If I were to make the crust, I would probably play around and try to reduce the calories. The crust is crunchy.
I use the basic recipe to use up vegetable leftovers. Chop up whatever you've got, mix with 2 eggs, cream (I had feta that was getting old and couldn't put it in a salad anymore), 2 tbls parmigiano, and pour into the crust. Bake at 375° until the crust is browned a bit. It's fast, and the leftovers keep in the frig for quite a while.6 -
Went grocery shopping this morning. I found the cutest small eggplants.
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The greengrocer still had artichokes but they were tiny. I normally steam artichokes and dip leaves in hollandaise but there won't be much flesh on these. Anyone have experience cooking tiny artichokes?
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Carnival squash! I got them each for a dollar in the clearance produce section. Basted with a mix of EVOO, salt, pepper, mustard, Worcestershire, and maple syrup. Roasted until soft. Excited to have one of these halves with dinner!7 -
Stuffed endive.
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I'm a displaced European so my broccoli is white aka cauliflower, ha ha
during the weight loss phase I believe in eating green vegetables with a protein, so chicken and green beans, or salmon and broccoli, or steak and spinach, (no filler carbs like white rice) or you get the idea mix it up
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snowflake954 wrote: »Stuffed endive.
This looks really delicious. Many people don't think of cooking lettuces, but they are great. Would you be willing to share the basics of the recipe/process? Mmmmmm.....1 -
snowflake954 wrote: »Stuffed endive.
This looks really delicious. Many people don't think of cooking lettuces, but they are great. Would you be willing to share the basics of the recipe/process? Mmmmmm.....
Sure--happy to. This is a traditional recipe that I came across while throwing out old papers. It's from Central Italy.
Wash and dry the endive heads and pull off the harder leaves on the outside. The smaller and tenderer the heads, the better. Prepare the "stuffing", for each head 5 black olives without stones, whole or chopped, a garlic clove minced, 4-5 cherry tomatoes chopped. Place in the heart of the head and salt and pepper and throw some grated Pecorino or Parmigiano on top. Close the head and tie it closed with string.
In a large flat pan with at least 5" sides, put in some EVOO, a garlic clove, and a piece of red pepper. Heat this up and when it's hot throw in the endive bundles. Cover and cook on low 20-30 min. Turn carefully during cooking (I used a fork and spatula). They throw out a lot of liquid and the stuffing escapes. Cut the string and remove.
There was quite a bit of flavorful liquid in the bottom of the pan so I took the tougher leaves, chopped them up and threw them in. They cooked up well.
This is the basic and it came out very tasty. You can also add pine nuts, raisins, or chopped almonds.6 -
senalay788 wrote: »Plates of sadness. Sorry.
But if this works for you, you do you.
We are still talking about weight loss here right? ha ha
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senalay788 wrote: »Plates of sadness. Sorry.
But if this works for you, you do you.
We are still talking about weight loss here right? ha ha
You can lose and still eat wonderful, tasty food. I think that's the purpose of this thread. It's great to get ideas on how to cook different vegetables, and see different produce from around the world. I don't criticize what people eat, but I grew up on a farm with basic meat and potatoes, so I'm familiar with that and want to branch out. Lose weight and have fun, the internet opens up a whole new world of recipes.5 -
snowflake954 wrote: »senalay788 wrote: »Plates of sadness. Sorry.
But if this works for you, you do you.
We are still talking about weight loss here right? ha ha
You can lose and still eat wonderful, tasty food. I think that's the purpose of this thread. It's great to get ideas on how to cook different vegetables, and see different produce from around the world. I don't criticize what people eat, but I grew up on a farm with basic meat and potatoes, so I'm familiar with that and want to branch out. Lose weight and have fun, the internet opens up a whole new world of recipes.
Definitely
I never take photos since that would require me to use nicer plates or at least not mixing bowls for things like salad and soup, and plus I'm not good at it, but maybe I will try. Some delicious produce-forward dishes lately:
Yesterday for lunch I had pacific cod with zucchini noodles to which I added my last cauliflower and carrots from my garden, as well as some of my garden's chard (I still have more), plus some cherry tomatoes, mushrooms, green olives, and of course garlic. Sauteed in a little olive oil (noodles added just before it came off the heat), and the cod served on top. Drizzled with some white wine vinegar.
For dinner I had a basic salad (oil, vinegar, and an Italian seasoning mix for the dressing, I use less oil than in a standard vinaigrette to cut cals): romaine, tomatoes, carrots, celery, radishes, and a few chopped kalamata olives. With it I had a chicken chili (although it ended up more like a soup) made with tomatoes, various peppers (chipotle and jalapeno), garlic and onion, a dried bean and lentil mix I bought from a local middle eastern grocery, shredded chicken thighs, and lime juice. I actually made this as part of my current experiments with my instant pot and used some homemade chicken stock in it as well. I didn't actually bother juicing the lime but just quartered it and tossed it in and that worked great. The soup's broth turned out really delicious, spicy/tomato-y/lime-y.
Neither of these dishes would have been hard for me to fit into a weight loss diet -- I had fewer than 1350 cals yesterday (not intentionally).
I also recently made a "parsley pesto," (it also used sesame seeds in place of pine nuts), which I had on pasta and veg (I always use what is on hand, I think it was mainly cauliflower, zucchini, and mushroom) with some salmon. This was less low cal (since pesto), but the pesto was strong enough that you really didn't need to use a lot, and really tasty.3 -
senalay788 wrote: »Plates of sadness. Sorry.
But if this works for you, you do you.
We are still talking about weight loss here right? ha ha
I would not call your choice of food style "sad', personally, because I think that's kinda mean. I also think your implication is incorrect that people have to eat a very limited range of foods in order to lose weight, and in this particular produce-centric thread *extremely* incorrect.
I think perhaps you didn't read the room well . . . or in this case, the thread. If you browse back through posts, you will see lots of delicious-looking, varied, calorie-efficient, generous-portioned, nutritious foods, all centered (because of the thread theme) on veggies and fruits. Some dishes pictured (but not all) have limited protein, but I wouldn't make the assumption that protein wasn't in the meal - it's just not the focus of this thread.
Personally, I'd find meat + one green veg to be a *deeply* unsatisfying meal pattern. I wouldn't still with it: Big boredom, low enjoyment, for me. If it gets you to overall well-rounded nutrition, and suits *you*, that's great. I'm speculating, but you may prefer not to spend the extra prep time for the produce-centric dishes in this thread, but that tradeoff is pretty individual, and has zero to do with calorie levels. Or, perhaps you simply wouldn't enjoy eating them - also fine.
Enjoy your meat + green, sincerely!3 -
senalay788 wrote: »senalay788 wrote: »Plates of sadness. Sorry.
But if this works for you, you do you.
We are still talking about weight loss here right? ha ha
This thread is about love of produce NOT how little or sad do you eat to lose weight.
AMEN! AWOMAN/goddess/etc etc.
This is a celebration of:
-produce!
-produce preparation tips!
-storage hacks for produce!
-gardening victories!
Today:
Jicama taco shells, with a broccoli slaw (green goddess dressing), shredded pork (purchased), chiffonade mint, fresh salsa.
No pics because IN OUR FACES immediately.
Been doing a lotta ‘hummus plus olives plus veg’ snack meals. So this counted as actual cooking in my world 😁5 -
snowflake954 wrote: »senalay788 wrote: »Plates of sadness. Sorry.
But if this works for you, you do you.
We are still talking about weight loss here right? ha ha
You can lose and still eat wonderful, tasty food. I think that's the purpose of this thread. It's great to get ideas on how to cook different vegetables, and see different produce from around the world. I don't criticize what people eat, but I grew up on a farm with basic meat and potatoes, so I'm familiar with that and want to branch out. Lose weight and have fun, the internet opens up a whole new world of recipes.
Definitely
I never take photos since that would require me to use nicer plates or at least not mixing bowls for things like salad and soup, and plus I'm not good at it, but maybe I will try. Some delicious produce-forward dishes lately:
Yesterday for lunch I had pacific cod with zucchini noodles to which I added my last cauliflower and carrots from my garden, as well as some of my garden's chard (I still have more), plus some cherry tomatoes, mushrooms, green olives, and of course garlic. Sauteed in a little olive oil (noodles added just before it came off the heat), and the cod served on top. Drizzled with some white wine vinegar.
For dinner I had a basic salad (oil, vinegar, and an Italian seasoning mix for the dressing, I use less oil than in a standard vinaigrette to cut cals): romaine, tomatoes, carrots, celery, radishes, and a few chopped kalamata olives. With it I had a chicken chili (although it ended up more like a soup) made with tomatoes, various peppers (chipotle and jalapeno), garlic and onion, a dried bean and lentil mix I bought from a local middle eastern grocery, shredded chicken thighs, and lime juice. I actually made this as part of my current experiments with my instant pot and used some homemade chicken stock in it as well. I didn't actually bother juicing the lime but just quartered it and tossed it in and that worked great. The soup's broth turned out really delicious, spicy/tomato-y/lime-y.
Neither of these dishes would have been hard for me to fit into a weight loss diet -- I had fewer than 1350 cals yesterday (not intentionally).
I also recently made a "parsley pesto," (it also used sesame seeds in place of pine nuts), which I had on pasta and veg (I always use what is on hand, I think it was mainly cauliflower, zucchini, and mushroom) with some salmon. This was less low cal (since pesto), but the pesto was strong enough that you really didn't need to use a lot, and really tasty.
Screengrabs of these captions. Thanks! Needed the inspo.2 -
Lunch of savoy cabbage stir fried with garlic, rice noodles that had been soaking in cold water, garlic, chinese sausage, soy and oyster sauces, Searing with a blow torch at the end gives that smokey taste to wokked greens that I associate with Chinese restaurant cooking with their super high temperature burners.
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I cooked the last of my chanterelle mushrooms yesterday. They held up surprisingly well; I did have to cull a few.
Their moisture level was way down, so I decided to make them into a batch of soup. I often make a Hungarian style mushroom soup, but I don't have milk or cream in the house, so I thought I'd branch out.
Then I remembered - mushroom barley soup is DELICIOUS. I even found two stalks of celery in the garden that weren't totally ruined to add. I'll finish cooking it today, but might let the flavors meld until tomorrow and just eat more of those good black beans I made yesterday.
Maybe I'll take a picture when it's done. I better hurry because it won't last long around here. Mushrooms AND barley AND tasty vegetables? Oh YEAH!
Editing to add:
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Okay, I'll try this, but the colors always look muddled in my shots vs. reality, and I don't think I arrange things nicely on a plate. Salmon and spaghetti squash topped with zucchini, asparagus, cherry tomatoes, rainbow chard (from my garden), garlic, pine nuts, and feta.
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Vegetable pie--spinach, grated zucchini, and potato.8 -
Beautiful! And I'm sure delicious too.
Today's dinner was Swedish meatballs with cabbage, golden beets, and apples. Onions were in the meatballs and cooked with the cabbage. (There's more cabbage than it looks -- it's largely hidden by the meatballs.)
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Gorgeous golden beets, lemurcat! Did you grow them?1
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Today I made a favorite of mine--low cal too. Cream of celery and potato soup w freshly grated Parmigiano.
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spinnerdell wrote: »Gorgeous golden beets, lemurcat! Did you grow them?
No, got them from the farmer's market. The cabbage is from my garden. I may try to grow beets next year, though.3 -
Does red lentil/winter squash soup count as produce, if I put onions, elephant garlic, and some homegrown fresh sage in it? (There were toasted pumpkin seeds in there, too. I caramelized the onions, added the chopped elephant garlic to the pan with the chopped sage leaves to soften, then pureed all of that plus the pumpkin seeds and some smoked paprika with the food processor, and added to cooked red lentils mixed with a couple cups of the roasted smashed Georgia Candy Roaster squash I'd frozen back in September.) Topped with a blop of chevre and a few more whole pumpkin seeds . . . edible, if I do say so myself.
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