Friday, July 8, 2011

A Vegetarian 4th of July (It's Possible!)

As good, patriotic Americans, it is our duty on the 4th of July to drink beer, barbeque meat, and set off illegal explosives in the name of freedom. But as a vegetarian, I, much like many of you out there I’m sure, find the barbeque part of the equation to be a source of a little stress. I want to eat things cooked over open fire and too much lighter fluid too! Isn’t that my right? Well I’m here to say,: IT IS.

Once we decided that my backyard would be the center for the 4th of July festivities this year, I had two immediate thoughts:

1. I need to find a table so we can play beer pong. And,
2. I want this to be a barbeque that represents the hell out of vegetarians.

I decided that first order of business was to create the worlds best homemade veggie burger recipe. Now to me, I mean veggie burgers in the ‘attempts to tastes like meat’ sense, and not the ‘vegetable patty’ sense, although I think the latter has its place in my diet as well. If we’re barbequing, this thing needs to taste like meat. Frozen Boca patties, as much as I like them cooked on a stove stop, do not grill properly due to their frozeness, so I wanted to make patties from scratch in order to cook better. I knew my first place to turn, Gimme Lean: Ground Beef Style. It’s the meat in a tube you can make into other stuff; it’s awesome. After that I looked up real burger recipes, and took bits and pieces I liked from each to concoct, what turned out to be, The Ultimate Fake Burger*. After that I made sure to marinade lots of vegetables overnight for grilling the next day, have a lot of Southern Corn* on hand, and got my own separate charcoal grill so us veggies could cook in peace.

The highlight of my evening, aside from winning every game of beer pong I played, was the compliment I received from a vegetarian guest whom I had not met before. When the burgers where ready, I made sure to announce that any vegetarian present got first dibs, since there were only 8 to go around. A girl came up to me and said “Wow, a vegetarian getting priority at a barbeque. I’ve never had that before.”

Yeah, that’s what I was hoping for.

-Nikki

(Boston Fireworks, as seen from my roof. Pretty baller, right?)


*Recipes featured in this meeting

The Ultimate Fake Burger (Makes about 8 patties)

You will need:

2 tubes of Gimme Lean: Ground Beef Style
1 small Vidalia onion
4 cloves of garlic
1 egg
1 can of chipotle peppers in Adobo sauce (the brand I see most often in regular grocery stores is Embassa)
Salt and pepper, to taste

1. Cut beef into cubes to make for easier mixing later. Put in a large bowl.

2. Mince onion as small as possible, add to bowl. Ditto for garlic. Then add egg.

3. Chop 3 large peppers and add to bowl, as well as most or all of the sauce in the can.

4. Mix with your hands. Your hands are going to get messy, believe me. I've been there.





See? Proof. It may be gross, but it was definitely fun, and the most efficient want to go about it, so suck it up. It all washes off in the end.










4. Mold mixture into patties, and get fabulous burgers that look like this:











5. Grill, away from the center, for about 5-7 minutes on each side. If they get a little crispy it's ok, it actually adds a good flavor.










And in no time you'll have happy vegetarians eating them, like this:








*Southern Corn

You will need:

12 ears of corn
1 stick of butter, softened
1 tablespoon hot sauce
Salt and pepper, to taste

1. Peel the corn, but DO NOT remove the husk. You can get rid of the white stringy stuff though.

2. Mix all ingredients together in a bowl, and spread on corn.

3. Cover back up with the husk. You can even use a stray piece to tie around the middle, so the husk stays closed while cooking.

4. Grill for about 10-15 minutes, turning often.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

eating for one

So as you may have picked up from previous recent(ish) posts, there have been some changes in the group dynamic of the club, mostly geographic. And this sad little picture pretty much sums up what I have been re-learning in the past months: eating for one. There just aren't as many people around to cook for these days, and let's face it, without a partner in cooking crime it can feel less like a party and more like a chore to be in the kitchen pulling together a meal fit to feed a small village.
The way I cook changes when it's just me eating. I find that the 2 pitfalls of cooking for one are
a. I just don't put in as much effort
b. when I do, I have no sense of scale since I am used to there being many willing mouths to help consume. So I am left with a week of the same leftovers.

Therefore I have compiled my top tips for cooking--and eating-- alone.

1. you can build a meal around something that takes very little effort, but which with a bit of effort is way better for you. If you are making a sandwich, make yourself some sweet potato fries to go with them. Honestly, it's just a matter of turning on the oven and slicing up a spud, but feels way fancier when you have 2 things on your plate instead of one. Another such favorite combination is boxed mac and cheese paired with roasted brussels sprouts. I find that cooking where you just put something in the oven and can walk away to do other things is a nice trait in a meal when the social aspect of hanging around the kitchen isn't there.

2. if you're going the route of making an actual meal that will yield 7 days of leftovers, make sure it is something that, like Sean Connery, will just get better with age. I suggest soup. The flavors blend together nicely when it sits for a few days, it doesn't get dried out or rubbery or weird, you can freeze it, and it reheats well in any quantity. Also if you get sick of it by the end of the week you can usually find someone to foist a jar of soup off on. I save my empty peanutbutter jars for just this purpose so you don't even need to worry about getting your bowls or tupperware back. You just need to worry about making sure none of your friends have peanut allergies so you don't accidentally kill them with your deadly friendship soup.

3. On the etiquette of eating alone-- why yes, it is easy to put on a show and plunk down on the futon and eat with a bowl in your lap. But where this activity may be fun for a group feed, alone it can feel dangerously close to crazy cat lady territory, especially if you actually have cats, are wearing slippers, and are watching something on Masterpiece Theater. Given that all of these are apt to be true of myself, I have been trying to sit at a real table when I eat. I find it can be a good time to flip through a magazine, which also ensures that I don't inhale my food in 15 seconds. Because without conversation or anything to distract me from the act of eating, this is also quite likely to happen to me.

4. Baked potato, in any form, is your friend. I love me a baked potato. And if there is one thing that is convenient about cooking for one, it sure is economical. A bag of potatoes goes a long way. It took me a while to realize this after The Great Exodus of 2011, and I kept doing groceries like maybe some Vikings were going to drop by for an impromptu banquet and I should be prepared. Moral of the story: wasted money, wasted food, interesting science projects to discover in your fridge.

5. Cooking for 1 is a great time to try out a new recipe, because if it fails you don't have to admit it to anyone, and no one has to pretend to like your Cabbage, Noodle, And Banana Surprise casserole.

6. Don't forget that you lose nothing by inviting other people to come eat at your place. After getting out of the habit of cooking for many and having built-in eaters, I found that I was forgetting to beam my Bat Signal into the sky when I actually did cook. Maybe I even fell into the trap of thinking that the stomachs I was used to filling were the only ones out there. But food has always been the pathway to friendship; it's the fundamental creed that the Stoned Soup club was built on.

Maybe all this change has served to remind us to go back to our roots.
And our root vegetables.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Happy 4/20!



Happy holidays loyal readers! Hope your day is filled with much laughter, many friends, and tons of good things to eat. Can't figure out exactly what your munchies are calling out for? Here's a few easy ideas to feed the beast within:

-Toast with butter and cinnamon
-Nachos with Soy Chorizo
-Strawberries dipped in melted dark chocolate
-Ruffled potato chips with Helluva Good French Onion Dip
-Snickers
-Graham crackers with peanut butter
-Macaroni and cheese

Lastly, I would like to pay homage to what I consider to be the mother of all munchie food, the food which all other junk food tremble before, and that is:


In and Out Animal Style Fries. I cry a little inside every day that I no longer live in California and have access to this beacon of deliciousness. But if you ever in your life get a chance to eat this, The Stoned Soup Club HIGHLY recommends it.

Until next time...
SS Club

Sunday, April 10, 2011

New Kitchens, New Lives

As the SS Club convened on New Years Eve to drink champagne on the streets on Northampton and watch the disappointing town glass ball RISE, we decide to make a club resolution: Blog posts every week! We're responsible adults, right? There are 2 of us, we should easily be able to assign ourselves the task of writing once every 2 weeks, right? Well, as you can see by the dates between this post and the last, we were shooting a bit too high. But don't you worry, we have excuses! One of them being the main topic of today's post: Moving.

As of mid January, 50% of The SS Club has picked up and moved East in search of better jobs and big city livin'. We refused to look at this as the club disbanding, but instead as us branching out and starting individual chapters; you are currently looking at the President of SS Club: Boston. Moving wasn't easy. Not being a stones throw away from my other SS President, and our band of loyal followers who would show up to an impromptu dinner at the drop of a hat, has been a hard adjustment. But another bump in the road I was not expecting was the concept of relocating to a brand new kitchen.

In my old house, my kitchen was MINE. No one else that lived there really cooked, so I pretty much ran the show. I bought and cooked the majority of the food, I controlled what items were found where, what times things happened, and operated under the overall assumption that the kitchen was my domain, and anyone else there was merely a visitor (other SS Presidents excluded). Then I arrived in Boston, and I had to learn how to, ::gasp::, share! I quickly noticed that I was living in a house where all the people cooked at least a little, and that this was now a shared space. Also, that this kitchen setup was established long before I arrived, and it was my job to find my place in it. Lastly, I was the only vegetarian, so if I wanted to keep my cookware animal free, I had to wash and put away everything immediately after eating, in a separate place that was established to be only mine.

Things weren't easy right away; it took a long while to feel comfortable. The new roommates didn't always eat what I made, so my normal habits of cooking for 4+ people had to be scaled down. My pride took a bit of a blow there too. (What's wrong with the dinner I'm making? Not good enough for ya?) They didn't always eat at the same time either, so dining with at least a few people on a regular basis changed as well; sometimes, it was just me. I didn't always know what was in the refrigerator, because I was not the only person putting food in or taking it out of there. It made me long for the days for a kitchen all to my very own.

It wasn't until the night that I made the lasagna that things all changed. It was my first serious dinner attempt in my new apartment, after living off frozen crap and Chipotle while I finished the daunting task of unpacking and generally getting used to life in a completely different location. I decided it was finally time to find my place in the kitchen that was partly mine, whether I was ready for it or not. I gathered my ingredients and made the 'Peace Offering Lasagna' and garlic bread.*

Lasagna is one of the easiest things I know how to make, and is often the most impressive. It was actually the first real dinner I ever cooked by myself, after I dragged an unopened cookbook off my bookshelf in college, went to my kitchen and said "I am going to do this". The good thing about lasagna is that once you get the basic idea of how to do it, you can put whatever the heck you want in it: for example some asparagus and summer squash in the warmer months, sweet potatoes and cauliflower in the colder ones (the recipe I include at the bottom is for a more Spring version).

The lasagna was a big hit and was enjoyed by all the new roommates, and even some visiting friends. I'd like to think that it was a big step in our relationship with each other, the experience leading us to a point where we realized that we were people who we in fact actually wanted to spend time with, and not just people who all happened to live in the same place. They've eaten a lot more of my food since, and we've spent a lot more time together. To that I ponder, maybe sharing is caring.

-Nikki


*Recipes featured in this meeting

Peace Offering Lasagna (Spring version) with Garlic Bread

You will need-

Box of lasagna noodles
3 cloves of garlic
1/2 large sweet onion
3 large carrots
1 green pepper
1 package Tofurkey Spicy Italian Sausage
Bunch of asparagus
1 Portobello mushroom cap
1/2 bag of fresh spinach
1 jar spaghetti sauce
1 bag shredded mozzarella cheese

1 loaf of french bread
1/2 cup butter, softened
2 cloves of garlic, minced
1 tablespoon parsley


1. Set oven to 350 degrees. Bring a large salted pot of water to a boil, and cook 10 lasagna noodles (3 for each of the 3 layers, plus 1 extra in case one breaks) for 2 minutes less than stated on the package. I suggest chopping vegetables while the whole boiling/cooking process is happening, so the noodles aren't sitting around for too long. When they are finished drain all the hot water and fill the pot with cold, so the noodles stop cooking and keep from sticking together.

2. In a large frying pan (biggest you got) heat a few tablespoons of olive oil and add chopped garlic. Add chopped onions and carrots, cook for 3 minutes uncovered. Next add chopped green pepper, asparagus (about 6-10 shoots, depending on the size) and Tofurkey sausage (I suggest cutting each sausage lengthwise first, then into half moon shapes); cook 3 more minutes. Lastly add chopped mushroom and spinach, cooking for about 3 more minutes. Sprinkle liberally with salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes. It's ok if vegetables are still crunchy when they are done, as this is going in the oven.

3. In a 9x13 pan, cover the bottom in a thin layer of sauce to prevent sticking. Lay down 3 noodles side by side. In your frying pan, mix veggies and sauce together, leaving about 1/3 of the jar left for the top. Scoop half of veggie mixture and spread evenly over noodles. Cover in a layer of cheese. Lay down 3 more noodles and repeat. Lay down the last 3 noodles, cover with remaining sauce and cheese. Bake in oven for 35-40 minutes, until edges are brown and cheese is fully melted.

4. For garlic bread, mix butter, garlic and parsley in a bowl. Cut 1 inch thick slices in the garlic bread, but stop before you cut through the bottom so that all pieces are connected. Spread butter mixture on each side of the slice. Wrap the loaf in tin foil, and heat in 350 oven for 10 minutes.