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Archives for 2012

Still Stuffed

November 26, 2012 by Erica

coffee & quinoa

Well, that’s a total lie. I can always eat more.

But I figured we could all use a break from the recipes today, right? We can get back to that business tomorrow. After a week of cooking and an extended weekend of eating, I’m finding it a little hard to get excited to get back in the kitchen. (I’m also finding it a little hard to get back to work.) I would rather just look at pictures and pretend I have another four-day weekend coming up. So how about a Thanksgiving recap?

So much food.

coffee & quinoa

This was my first vegan Thanksgiving! I was determined to make it as easy on myself as possible by making tons of delicious vegan dishes. My contributions to Thanksgiving dinner were:

– roasted beet hummus from Cooking Stoned with veggies and pitas

– mushroom sourdough stuffing from Eat Live Run

– cheesy herb drop biscuits from Oh She Glows

– baked sweet potatoes

– apple pie and pumpkin pie from Pickles & Honey

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Everything was pretty good, if I do say so myself! We had an absurd amount of food. My friend Kate cooked a 22 pound turkey (which looked and smelled delicious!), and she and Pete did a great job carving it:

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Hah! That’s my absolute favorite picture of the night.

Anyway, Kate also made the gravy, a beautiful salad with homemade candied pecans, homemade Chex mix, guacamole, and cranberry sauce. Her friend Kristin made mashed potatoes, stuffing, a beautiful baked brie, and spiced hot cider. I’m sure there were other things I forgot, too! Check out the absurdity of our spread:

coffee & quinoa

The food prep was not without drama, though. I mentioned on Thursday that my apple pie was a minor disaster. Welllll let me tell you what happened. Basically, I’ve never really been scared of pie dough like some people are, although rolling out a double crust is generally a little more effort than I like to put in. I usually mix my crust by hand, but having recently bought a food processor and heard how amazing it is for pie crusts, I decided I would use it to save a few minutes. It was also my first time making a crust with vegan butter. I should NOT have tried two new things at once. I ended up making the crust way too wet and doubling the recipe without realizing it, which led to a thick and doughy crust:

coffee & quinoa

Then, to make matters worse, I forgot to dot the apples with butter before I put the top crust on. I was convinced the pie was ruined. I agonized about it for a while before I made a trip to the supermarket and bought ingredients for a new pie. That might sound ridiculous… OK, it was a little ridiculous… but I know people think the vegan thing is kind of weird, and I definitely didn’t want anyone’s first experience with vegan pie to be disappointing in any way. It turned out the “reject” pie was actually not bad at all – we ate it the whole rest of the weekend. I’ll call it a win – extra leftover pie can’t possibly be a bad thing.

So that made Thursday morning a little crazier. In addition to the stuffing and biscuits I had planned to make, I was also making a second apple pie. So much for my carefully drawn out plans!

coffee & quinoa

This time I overcorrected a little on the crust and probably could have added another tablespoon of water. Whatever, it was extra flaky. And I made sure to add that butter before closing up the pie!

coffee & quinoa

coffee & quinoa

Also, make sure to note the pi sign on the pie… har har har. My dad started that tradition!

My hand was sore all weekend from peeling and coring all the apples… seriously.

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I escaped with only one addition to my collection of forearm burns, although I think Kate ended up with a few more from the turkey. That was it for holiday drama, fortunately. Once our umpteen dishes were ready, we ate…

coffee & quinoa

…the boys watched football…

coffee & quinoa

…and I fell asleep on the couch once the Pats were up 28-0 and may or may not have been out for the next 3 hours. We played Jenga…

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…and watched the Adjustment Bureau and part of The Descendants., followed by Megamind (a surprisingly good movie!) the next morning. We definitely got our share of movies in this weekend! Perfectly relaxing.

We had such a good time celebrating Thanksgiving with friends! I was proud of us girls for doing so well with the food. Does that mean we’re finally adults? I guess I have to admit that we are.

Other weekend activities included watching more football, shopping, lots of pie eating, even more football, running (!), skiiing, oh did I mention football? and demolishing all of our leftovers. It was a great long weekend! I have to say I didn’t do much cooking after the craziness of Thanksgiving prep, so this week may be a little light on recipes. Forgive me? I’ll get back into the swing of things soon!

Hope you had a great holiday weekend!

Filed Under: Misc. Tagged With: thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving!

November 22, 2012 by Erica

coffee & quinoa

Happy Turkey Day! Well, more like Vegan Stuffing and Pie Day around here. Doesn’t have quite the same ring to it, but sounds delicious nonetheless!

This afternoon Nate and I are heading up to Park City for a Thanksgiving dinner with friends. We’re actually doing it at the house where my friend Kate house-sits. That might sound odd, BUT we all have tiny apartments, and this house has a gorgeous kitchen with two ovens. No-brainer! There are only six of us, but we are making TONS of food. I can’t wait. I’m bringing lots of tupperware for leftovers!

So far I’m right on track with my big list of dishes to prepare. The pumpkin pie was made on Tuesday night, apple pie and beet hummus last night (the vegan apple pie was a minor disaster… I won’t know how bad until we actually eat it), and stuffing, vegan gravy, rolls and sweet potatoes will be made today. Now you know what I’ll be doing all morning!

Today, like every day of my life, I have a lot to be thankful for. Loving and supportive parents, the sweetest sisters a girl could ask for, and amazing friends. My wonderful boyfriend, who makes me laugh every day, and the opportunity to experience beautiful new places in our country with him. I’m also thankful to have a job that pays the bills and even allows me to buy twice as many groceries as I really should! And I’m thankful for the opportunity to write here and share my ridiculous passion for food with others who feel the same way.

I’m missing my parents and sisters today. Not only do I miss my mom’s cooking, I miss all being together in my parents’ big house. I don’t think I realized that as my sisters and I grew older, we might permanently settle far away from each other. Caitlin and Alban are both in North Carolina, and I’m out here in Utah. Sometimes I ask myself what I’m doing so far away from them! I still have my fingers crossed that someday we’ll all live in the same town and have our babies play in the bathtub together.

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In the meantime, I’m looking forward to Christmas, when my whole family will pile into my parents’ house, drive each other crazy for a week, and finally escape back to our respective states! :)

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This Thanksgiving, as I’m not travelling, I have a whole four-day weekend to cook, ski with friends, catch up on my reading, and just generally fulfill my weekday fantasy of curling up on the couch in the middle of the day. With enormous tupperwares of Thanksgiving leftovers… yum.

Happy Thanksgiving – enjoy the time with family and friends!

Filed Under: Misc. Tagged With: thanksgiving

Mexican Butternut Squash Soup

November 21, 2012 by Erica

mexican squash soup from coffee & quinoa

Tomorrow is Thanksgiving. Do you know what you’re eating?

Not for dinner, silly. What kind of question is that? If you’re like me, you’ve been dreaming about Thanksgiving dinner for the past two weeks. I have lists made, not only of the dishes I’m making and the groceries that I (still – eek!) have to buy, but of when I should prepare what. Organization is kind of my thing.

Anyway, no, I’m not asking if you’ve given any thought to your Thanksgiving dinner, because I’m sure you have. I’m talking about lunch, the oft-forgotten Thanksgiving meal. If you’re eating dinner around noon, you can obviously forego lunch. But if you eat Thanksgiving dinner around 3:00 or 4:00, as my family typically does, you might find yourself in the kitchen come 1:00, trying to put together a sandwich or salad out of scraps from the fridge. It’s kind of weird to realize that in the frenzy of dinner planning, you’ve totally forgotten to plan a lunch… especially if you have holiday house guests. You don’t want anyone going hungry!

Luckily, my mom is always prepared (in this situation, as well as most others). Her solution is soup.

mexican squash soup from coffee & quinoa

Soup for Thanksgiving lunch – it’s perfect! It’s autumnal and comforting, but not too filling, so you’ll still be able to stuff yourself in a few hours. Mom likes to serve her lunchtime soup in big mugs, although you can feel free to use a bowl.

This soup has a butternut squash base and uses chipotle chiles in adobo sauce for a nice little Mexican kick. Top with cilantro and a squeeze of lime, and you have the perfect light but satisfying lunch.

mexican butternut squash soup

Mexican Butternut Squash Soup
 
Print
Hands-on time
15 mins
Cook time
55 mins
Total time
1 hour 10 mins
 
Author: Coffee & Quinoa
Yields: 6-8
Ingredients
  • 1 medium-sized butternut squash, peeled and chopped
  • 1 yellow onion, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 carrots, diced
  • 2 stalks celery, chopped
  • 5 cups vegetable broth
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 2 chipotle chiles in adobo sauce (or more if you’d like it spicy!)
  • 2 tsp cumin
  • ½ tsp coriander
  • ½ cup non-dairy milk (I used regular unsweetened almond milk)
  • cilantro, for serving
  • lime wedges, for serving
Instructions
  1. First, chop all vegetables. To make the butternut squash easier to peel and chop, consider piercing it several times with a sharp knife and nuking for 2 minutes or so. This softens the skin and makes it just that much less likely that you’ll cut your finger off!
  2. Heat a bit of olive oil in a soup pot over medium heat. Add the onion and saute 2-3 minutes. Add the garlic and saute another 2-3 minutes, until the onion is softened and beginning to brown.
  3. Add the rest of the vegetables (squash, carrots and celery), vegetable broth, and bay leaf. Simmer until vegetables are tender and starting to get mushy, about 45-50 minutes.
  4. While soup is simmering, chop chiles, cilantro and lime wedges.
  5. Remove bay leaf from the soup. (If you don’t, it’s no big deal. I actually forgot and it turned out fine!) Add chopped chiles and puree until smooth using an immersion blender. (If you don’t have an immersion blender, you can transfer the soup in batches to a blender and then into another pot or a bowl.)
  6. Stir in cumin, coriander, and milk.Taste and adjust seasonings - you can add more chiles if you’d like it spicier!
  7. Serve hot. Garnish with chopped cilantro and a squeeze of lime juice.
Notes
Adapted from http://www.anothermarvelousmeal.com/2011/10/mexican-spiced-butternut-squash-soup.html
3.1.09

 

Filed Under: Soups, Vegan, Vegetarian Tagged With: mexican, soup, squash

Tuesday Book Review: The Hunger Games

November 20, 2012 by Erica

Well, I didn’t get any recommendations after my last book review.

Although Mom did inform me that she wrote her high school senior thesis on East of Eden.

I’m thinking that no one writes their senior thesis on The Hunger Games. Actually, I take that back – I’m sure that in my old high school alone, dozens of kids have written their thesis on The Hunger Games in the past few years. I hope their teachers are trying to make them write about John Steinbeck instead.

But let me back up, because I’m making it sound like I hated this book. Quite the opposite: I can’t wait to read Catching Fire.

I know that I’m late to the party. I was late to the vampire party, too. And the quidditch party. And I’m holding out on that shades of grey party for as long as I possibly can.

And that’s exactly why it’s 2012 and I’m reading The Hunger Games for the first time: I’ve been holding out. It’s very similar to what I did with the Twilight books, except that I never intended to read Twilight. But then I was driven to distraction alone in Nate’s apartment during my first week in Utah, having already finished every other book on his roommate’s shelf, and finally picked up Twilight. Oh well, I thought, it will keep me entertained. And did it EVER. I spent the next few weeks plowing through all four books, wondering why I had looked down my nose at them for so long.

I read The Hunger Games in exactly 5 elliptical sessions plus one session of eating 3 pieces of cake. Typical.

If you’re one of the last people on earth to read this book, let me tell you the premise: It is set in a somewhat post-apocalyptic America, call Panem, where every year a boy and a girl from each district are chosen by lottery to fight to the death with teenagers from the other districts. Katniss Everdeen, the main character, volunteers for the Hunger Games in place of her younger sister, whose number is drawn. Being a small and underfed girl, she is at a disadvantage against better-fed teenagers from other districts who have trained for the Games their whole lives. The book chronicles her fight, with many nail-biting moments, a love triangle, cliff-hanging chapter endings, and everything else you would expect from this type of preteen drama.

I once heard this type of fantasy novel described as a world that makes you want to buy real estate. And that’s exactly how The Hunger Games is. Suzanne Collins builds a world that hooks you in and keeps you turning the page. It’s the literary equivalent of “Call Me Maybe” – it may not be a masterpiece in the traditional sense of the word, but you can’t help but love it, and you have to admire the talent that could come up with something so catchy.

So that’s my deep reflection on The Hunger Games. It’s a guilty pleasure read that I  thoroughly enjoyed. If you’re like I was and think it’s not worth reading, think again. Serve yourself 3 pieces of cake and get into it!

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: books

Weekend + Gluten-Free Cranberry-Orange Walnut Tart

November 19, 2012 by Erica

cranberry walnut tart from coffee & quinoa

What a great weekend! I am so tired.

I said that I just wanted to sleep this weekend. But it turns out there was a lot of other stuff I wanted to do, too! So now I’m drinking green tea, hoping it will keep me up long enough to finish this post before I faceplant into my pillow.

Friday night was relatively uneventful. My cousin is in town to audition for the symphony, so once she got in on Friday, we went to dinner at a Middle Eastern restaurant in town. After dinner, it was pie baking time! I wanted to bring two pies to a Thanksgiving dinner party on Saturday night, so I had to get started. First up: a cranberry-orange walnut tart.

gluten-free cranberry orange tart from coffee & quinoa

This tart was yummy, and believe it or not, gluten-free! I’ll give the recipe below. I’m eating a leftover slice right now!

Making one pie was all I could handle on Friday, so we called it an early night. Saturday we were up early for brunch at Caffe Niche, followed by more pie-baking!

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I really liked this pear frangipane tart. I’ll give the recipe if anyone wants to see it, but I didn’t modify it at all from the original.

pear frangipane tart from coffee & quinoa

Saturday afternoon, we also did a bit of Salt Lake City sight seeing. Then we headed over to our friends Matt and Alex’s for a fancy Thanksgiving dinner party. Just look at what they turned their living room into!

thanksgiving

They had more than 20 people to a sit-down dinner. Alex is super crafty, and made us each a personalized clay charm for our wine glass! She also did the beautiful table decorations.

We ate way too much, of course. There was also some wine involved!

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Yum.

We had such a great time with friends Saturday night – thanks Alex and Matt! It made a little hard to get up Sunday morning to go up to Snowbird. Luckily, we made it!

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It was my first day out this year, and happily, the snow was good! It was actually snowing quite hard in the afternoon. It made for tough visibility, but a few good runs!

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I had meant to get some powder skis for this season (my second winter in the West!), but I haven’t gotten around to it yet. I also never got around to getting the skis I do own tuned up. They literally had cobwebs on them when I took them out of our storage shed this morning. It made for a pretty sloppy day. But I can’t lie… it’s the skier, not the skis, that has some cobwebs to clear! Hopefully I’ll get out more this year than last, and improve a bit more.

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My partner in crime. How cute is he?

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Pete and Suzanne made me jealous with their bright-colored ski pants. I think I may need to get some…

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And we ended the day with beer and nachos up at Alta.

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So I’m now realizing that my weekend could be summarized into “eating, skiing, and more eating.” Yep. Pretty ideal, if you ask me. Let’s do it again next weekend!

Anyway, speaking of eating, let me get back to the cranberry-orange tart.

gluten-free cranberry-orange tart from coffee & quinoa

I didn’t actually mean to make this gluten-free, but it ended up that way, so I’ll take it! This tart has a crust made almost entirely out of walnuts, filled with a cranberry-orange mixture. It’s kind of like eating cranberry sauce out of a nutty crust, to be honest. It’s a pretty basic pie and is not too sweet, so it would make a good end to a rich, filling meal. Leftovers would also make a great breakfast the next day – a time-honored Foulser family tradition. :)

gluten-free cranberry-orange tart from coffee & quinoa

If you’ve never made a nut pie crust before, I highly recommend it. It’s much easier than rolling out a traditional pie crust and adds extra flavor. As a bonus, it’s a really easy way to go gluten-free. I’ve tried making regular pie crust before with gluten-free flour mixes, and never had very good results. So if you’re baking with a gluten-free family member or friend in mind, give it a try. The walnut one below could be filled with chocolate or any number of other fillings. I might use it for a pumpkin pie on Thursday.

5.0 from 1 reviews
Gluten-Free Cranberry-Orange Walnut Tart
 
Print
Hands-on time
10 mins
Cook time
30 mins
Total time
40 mins
 
Author: Coffee & Quinoa
Yields: 10
Ingredients
  • For the crust:
  • 3 cups walnut halves
  • 1 Tbsp canola oil
  • 3 Tbsp maple syrup
  • ⅛ tsp salt
  • For the filling:
  • juice of 1 orange
  • 2 1/2 Tbsp cornstarch
  • 1 (12-ounce) package fresh cranberries
  • ½ cup maple syrup
  • 1/4 cup orange marmalade
  • 1 Tbsp grated orange rind
  • 2 Tbsp chopped walnuts, toasted, plus extra for topping (optional)
Instructions
  1. Pre-heat oven to 325 degrees.
  2. In a food processor, process 3 cups walnuts to a find crumb. Remove to a bowl and mix with remaining crust ingredients. Mixture should hold together when pinched between two fingers, but not be too wet. Add some extra ground walnuts if it seems too wet, or a bit more maple syrup if it doesn't hold together.
  3. Press into a tart or pie pan, taking care to press some up against the sides to hold in the filling. Bake for 10 minutes, remove and let cool on a wire rack before filling.
  4. Increase oven temperature to 350. In a saucepan (without heat yet), whisk together orange juice and cornstarch. Now add the remaining filling ingredients. Heat over medium, stirring, until mixture is thick. This will take only a few minutes.
  5. Spread evenly into prepared crust. Bake at 350 for 20-30 minutes, until crust is golden brown. Remove to wire rack and let cool completely before serving. Optionally, top with additional toasted walnuts once cool.
Notes
Filling adapted from http://www.myrecipes.com/recipe/cranberry-orange-tart-10000000522224/
3.1.09

 

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Filed Under: Pies, Vegan Tagged With: cranberry, gluten free, orange, pie, skiing, tart, thanksgiving, walnut

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Hi, I'm Erica! I'm a lover of all types of food, although I’m mostly vegetarian these days. I like salad, but I LOVE chocolate. This blog is a place where I try to balance the two.
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Hi, I'm Erica! I'm a lover of all types of food, although I’m mostly vegetarian these days. I like salad, but I LOVE chocolate. This blog is a place where I try to balance the two.

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