It's Monday. Hope your weekend was good. Mine was, though I didn't get half the stuff done that I'd planned to do. (Does getting several naps in count?)
Well, here are six yummy vegetarian recipes to help get your week started off just right, including Grilled Margherita Pizza and Banana-Blueberry-Soy Smoothie. Enjoy!
STRAWBERRY-KIWI SMOOTHIE
This recipe, as well as the next one (Banana-Blueberry-Soy Smoothie) are from “20 Super Healthy Smoothie Recipes” on the Runner’s World website. They’re originally from The Editors of Prevention.
This recipe begins, “Stay full and fight disease. This high-fiber smoothie recipe becomes even healthier when you use organic kiwis, which contain higher levels of heart-healthy polyphenols and vitamin C.”
Servings: 4
1 1/4 cups cold apple juice
1 ripe banana, sliced
1 kiwi fruit, sliced
5 frozen strawberries
1 1/2 tsp honey
Combine the juice, banana, kiwifruit, strawberries, and honey. Blend until smooth.
Nutrition Information: Calories (per serving): 87; Protein: 0.5 g; Carbs: 22 g; Fiber: 1.5 g; Sugar: 16.5 g; Total fat: 0.3 g; Saturated fat: 0 g; Sodium: 3.5 mg
BANANA-BLUEBERRY-SOY SMOOTHIE
This recipe begins, “Succulent, summer-ripe blueberries burst with flavor in this delicious smoothie. If you like, skip the sugar; the fruit makes it naturally sweet.”
Servings: 2
1 1/4 cup light soy milk
1/2 cup frozen loose-pack blueberries
1/2 frozen banana, sliced
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
Combine 1 cup of the milk, the blueberries, banana, sugar or sweetener, and vanilla extract. Blend for 20 to 30 seconds, or until smooth. Add up to 1/4 cup more milk if a thinner smoothie is desired.
Nutrition Information: Calories: 125; Protein: 3 g; Carbs: 25 g; Fiber: 2 g; Sugar: 11 g; Total fat: 1.5 g; Saturated fat: 0.1 g; Sodium: 60 mg
BOILED POTATOES WITH BUTTER AND MINT
This is from Julia Moskin in The New York Times cooking e-newsletter. Julia wrote, "The chef April Bloomfield cooks from a place of profound hunger for good food: specifically, Birmingham in the Midlands of England, where she grew up in the 1970s and 1980s just as English food reached a low point. The childhood food she remembers most fondly: the hot buttered potatoes served in her school cafeteria. Her homage to that dish is this basic but stunningly good recipe for freshly boiled potatoes thickly glazed in butter and brightened with lemon, garlic, cracked black pepper and what she calls a 'five-fingered pinch' of fresh mint leaves, 'as much as you can grab with just the tips of all five fingers.'"
Yield: 3 to 4 servings; Time: 30 minutes.
This was featured in "April Bloomfield’s ‘A Girl and Her Greens’ Delights in the Details" and can be viewed online here.
Ingredients
1 pound small potatoes, like fingerlings or creamers, all about the same size
1 tablespoon flaky salt, like Maldon, or kosher salt
4 tablespoons/2 ounces cold unsalted butter, cut into 8 pieces
1 small garlic clove, finely grated or shaved
A 5-finger pinch of whole mint leaves, preferably black mint (see note)
1/2 lemon
Coarsely ground black pepper
Preparation
In a medium pot, combine potatoes and salt. Add enough cold water to cover the potatoes by a generous 1/2 inch and set the pot over high heat. Bring to a boil, then reduce to a vigorous simmer. Cook potatoes just until tender and creamy inside, 10 to 25 minutes depending on size.
Reserving 1/4 cup cooking liquid, gently drain the potatoes and return them to the stove. Add butter, garlic and reserved cooking liquid to the pot and set over medium heat. Bring to a simmer and cook, swirling the pan and basting as needed so that the liquid coats the potatoes until they are well glazed, about 5 minutes.
Tear the mint leaves into small pieces, stir them very gently into the potatoes, and take the pot off the heat. Squeeze on just enough lemon to add brightness, not sourness; taste as you go. Add salt and pepper to taste and serve immediately.
RHUBARB CRISP
This is from Mark Bittman, also in The New York Times cooking e-newsletter. Mark wrote, "When you think of rhubarb you probably think of strawberry-rhubarb pie, a quintessential spring dessert, especially if it’s made by someone who makes good pies. I usually manage around one pie crust annually, so I need alternatives. Thus, when the spring’s first rhubarb shows up, I adjust the execution and produce a crisp. If rhubarb is young and fresh, you can trim it in seconds. If it has fibrous outer strings, peel them off as you would those of celery. Toss the rhubarb with orange or lemon juice and zest, and only a little sugar. (You can also substitute strawberries for some of the rhubarb if you want the classic combination.) Blend the ingredients for the crisp topping in a food processor, crumble the topping over the rhubarb mixture, and bake — it is nearly effortless and as good or better than a pie."
Yield: 6 to 8 servings; Time: 1 hour.
This was featured in "Rhubarb Crisp That Stands Up to Pie" and can be viewe online here.
Ingredients
6 tablespoons cold butter, cut into small pieces, plus more for greasing pan
2 1/2 to 3 pounds rhubarb, trimmed, tough strings removed, and cut into 1 1/2-inch pieces (about 5 to 6 cups)
1/4 cup white sugar
1 tablespoon orange or lemon juice
1 teaspoon orange or lemon zest
3/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon, or to taste
Pinch salt
1/2 cup rolled oats
1/2 cup pecans
Preparation
Heat oven to 375 degrees. Grease an 8- or 9-inch square baking or gratin dish with a little butter. Toss rhubarb with white sugar, orange or lemon juice and zest, and spread in baking dish.
Put the 6 tablespoons butter in a food processor along with brown sugar, flour, cinnamon and salt, and pulse for about 20 or 30 seconds, until it looks like small peas and just begins to clump together. Add oats and pecans and pulse just a few times to combine.
Crumble the topping over rhubarb and bake until golden and beginning to brown, 45 to 50 minutes.
GRILLED MARGHERITA PIZZA
This comes from Al Roker of The Today Show, and begins, “Skip the oven and throw a pie on the grill!” Servings: 2 pizzas.
To view this online, click here.
Ingredients
1 pound pizza dough (homemade or thawed from frozen)
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup fine to medium cornmeal
1 pound fresh mozzarella cheese, lightly salted
1 bunch fresh basil
2 cups pizza sauce
Preparation
Place a pizza stone onto the grates of a hot grill, or into an oven heated to 500 degrees F.
For two thin-crust pizzas, about 10”- 12”, divide dough in half and shape each half into a ball. Place on lightly floured surface and cover with a light towel. Let sit and rest for about 10 minutes. [Alternately, use 1 pound dough to make 1 large thick-crust pizza.]
Mix the flour and cornmeal together and set aside.
Slice mozzarella thinly, about 1/8” to 1/4” thick.
Wash basil and pull off leaves. Blot them dry on paper toweling. Discard stems.
Sprinkle a pizza paddle or the back of a baking sheet with some of the cornmeal mixture and place 1 ball of dough in the center. Using floured hands, press the dough out into a flat circle, beginning in the center and working outwards while turning the dough to get an even thinness. Leave the outer edge a little thicker to form a crust.
Spread 1 cup pizza sauce over the dough but not on the crust edge, then top with half the mozzarella slices and half the basil leaves.
Using a fast back and forth motion, slide the dough to the edge of the paddle or baking sheet. Lean it toward the pizza stone and quickly slide the paddle out from underneath the pizza so that the dough is sitting directly on the pizza stone. Close the lid to the grill and cook 5-8 minutes, checking frequently for rapid browning. Depending on the heat of the grill, the pizza may be ready sooner or take a little longer. The oven should take about 8-10 minutes. Repeat with the second ball of dough.
ARTICHOKE-POTATO MEDLEY
This was in the September 2009 issue of Vegetarian Times, page 51. It begins, “For extra color, use a combination of potato varieties and serve on a bed of arugula or watercress.” Makes 6 servings.
To view this online, click here.
Ingredients
1 lb. small red potatoes, quartered
2 10-oz. boxes frozen artichoke
1 1/2 Tbs. olive oil
1/2 cup pitted kalamata olives, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced (4 tsp.)
3 Tbs. chopped parsley
2 Tbs. lemon juice
2 tsp. grated lemon zest
3/4 tsp. sweet or smoked paprika
3 hard-boiled eggs, chopped, optional
Preparation
Bring potatoes to a boil in large pot of salted water. Reduce heat to medium-low, and simmer 5 minutes, or until potatoes are just tender. Drain.
Return potatoes to saucepan; heat over high heat with artichokes and oil. Cook 5 minutes, or until vegetables start to brown, stirring occasionally. Add olives, garlic, parsley, lemon juice, lemon zest, and paprika. Season with salt and pepper, if desired. Cook 5 minutes more, or until fragrant and heated through. Serve garnished with chopped eggs, if using.
Vegetarian Recipes, along with occasional photos, tips (becoming a vegetarian, degrees of vegetarianism, products, being a vegetarian in a houseful of carnivores) and helpful hints. Not sure about becoming a vegetarian? Try a Meatless Monday (or any other day of the week). Helpful hints and recipes for good eating, any time.
Vegetarian Delights: A Confessions of a Foodie Offspring
Monday, January 20, 2020
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