Posts Tagged ‘Vegetarian’

Tipsy Goddess Ambrosia Salad

Posted on: October 6th, 2013 by Carla Johnson No Comments

“Rum, n. Generically, fiery liquors that produce madness in total abstainers.”
~ Ambrose Bierce

For almost 20 years, Julie Broad’s parents ran a bed & breakfast on Salt Spring Island in British Columbia, Canada. They loved hosting travelers who came from all over the world to explore the stunning landscape of the island. Breakfast was the only meal they offered, so they made sure to serve dishes that were fresh and especially memorable.

Julie’s parents both grew up in homes that nurtured a love of excellent food. Her dad’s grandfather was a master baker and her mother’s mom was a home economics teacher. Together, they raised their family with beautiful, healthy food in their home. A few years ago, Julie collected all of her parents’ Bed & Breakfast recipes and wrote a cook book called “Breakfast with the Broads.”

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

Julie and her dad

Julie’s mom has a knack for playing with traditional recipes and classing them up a little. She is also lactose intolerant, so her recipes tend to avoid creams. As a result, her dishes are often focused on fresh ingredients and natural flavours.

While the traditional Ambrosia Salad is based on cream, Julie’s mom also did not include the marshmallows. Her recipe makes fruit the focus and it elevates it to a whole new level of deliciousness.

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

I recently shared this recipe at the Waterloo Food & Drink Expo and modified it for the event. I ended up using all canned fruit and I threw in a can of leechee fruit as a visual substitute for the traditional marshmallows. I also heated mine just slightly in a pan. Plus, her original recipe called for rum extract, but I added the real thing – of course!

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

Carla’s “Tipsy Goddess Ambrosia Salad”

Serves 6

½ cup coconut
1 large can tropical fruit, drained
1 small can mandarin oranges, drained
1 can leechee fruit, drained
1 lime, juiced and half the rind grated
½ cup white rum
 

1. In the bottom of a large pan, over medium heat, lightly toast the coconut by swirling it around until it is light brown on the edges.

2. Add the drained canned fruit to the pan.

3. Add the lime rind, fresh lime juice and rum. Stir gently for 3 to 5 minutes to allow the fruit to absorb the rum and lime. Warm it just slightly so it is closer to body temperature. Enjoy the lime and rum aroma.

4. Serve in bowls. It also stores well in the fridge and can be served chilled.

Here are two more pages from “Breakfast with the Broads.”

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

While Julie and I have never met face-to-face, we feel like we know each other as we both have many shared connections in real estate investment circles in Canada. She recently published a book sharing her investing expertise called “More Than Cashflow.” Learn more about her ventures at www.revnyou.com. – Like the play on words? 😉

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

Facebook   Twitter

 

Toast 2013 with a Canadian Martini!

Posted on: December 30th, 2012 by Carla Johnson No Comments

 Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

“May the New Year bring you courage to break your resolutions early!
My own plan is to swear off every kind of virtue, so that I triumph even when I fall!”
 ~ Aleister Crowley

This quote makes me smile. It reminds me of the old SNL sketch “Lowered Expectations.” If you saw it, back in the day, you can probably still hum the tune. I am hoping 2013 will be a no nonsense year. No blubbering. No boasting. No baloney. Just lots of humour with a reality check.

You may have guessed I’m not a big believer in new year’s resolutions. They are usually doomed to fail for many good reasons. On the other hand I do take time to reflect and ponder at the start of a new year. My thoughts for 2013 are on my personal blog CarlaJohnson.ca.

For Infinity Magazine’s Winter 2012 issue I wrote an article featuring King’s Court Estate Winery in the Niagara Region here in Ontario. Roland Zimmermann, the owner & vintner of King’s Court, and I came up with a great drink you will find absolutely perfect for toasting in the new year. It is a mix of three very spectacular, Canadian ingredients. Enjoy!

King’s Courtini

1 shot King’s Court Estates Vidal Icewine VQA
1 shot Pure Canadian Maple Syrup
2 shots Canadian Whisky

1. Place ingredients in a shaker of ice.
2. Shake and strain into ice-filled martini glasses garnished with something festive.

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

Carla Johnson Cooking With Sin

“Presidential” Gluten-n-Dairy-Free Mushroom Pot Pie

Posted on: July 12th, 2012 by Carla Johnson No Comments

 “I’m going to throw caution to the winds and have a sweet sherry.” – Alan Bennett’s character Joyce Chilvers in the movie “A Private Function.”

Lauren Hoover-West

Cooking With Sin has some interesting connections. Chef Tim Wasylko, the creator of “Stuck on Reduction” Grilled Watermelon Salad has cooked for our Canadian Prime Minister. Now I get to share a recipe from someone who has cooked for U.S. political leaders.

Looking at my stats here, I was surprised to see how many people were looking for vegetarian recipes, but I knew that most of my vegetarian recipes were for sweets. So, I put a request on LinkedIn to find a vegetarian, gluten-free recipe that was a savoury. Lauren Hoover-West responded.

Lauren Hoover-West trained at The California Culinary Academy then worked as a pastry chef for some of the top restaurants in the United States. During her time at the Hyatt in Indian Wells, she was honoured to prepare food for 4 U.S. Presidents and a U.S. Senator.

Lauren went on to become a culinary school instructor and while she was working on her Psychology degree, she was diagnosed with food allergies. Always looking for opportunities to be creative in the kitchen, she started converting and testing recipes to work with her new diet of no gluten, no dairy and no refined sugar. She happily shared her food and recipes with her classmates who were a great source of encouragement.

Enjoying her new found health, Lauren furthered her new cooking style by incorporating vegetarian recipes. She also does not use xanthan gum or guar gum in her cooking.

Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"

 “Presidential” Gluten-n-Dairy-Free Mushroom Pot Pie

Yields: 1 pie, 6-8 servings

Step 1: Gluten-Free Pie Crust

This delicate, flaky pie crust can be made by hand, or in a food processor which is much faster. I learned how to make this from my Aunt. Her desserts are perfection and the whole family always looks forward to enjoying them at gatherings and holidays!

Yields: 2 single crusts

3 cups oat flour
½ teaspoon sea salt, fine
2 sticks vegan Earth Balance or 1 cup vegetable shortening, frozen and diced
½ cup iced water (bottled or filtered)

1. Put bowl and pastry cutter into the freezer while measuring out ingredients. Try to handle dough as little as possible. You want to keep the pieces of Earth Balance or shortening cold, which will make the crust flakey rather than tough.

2. Sift flour and salt into a large glass or metal mixing bowl or food processor. Add ½ cup shortening or 1 stick Earth Balance and cut into the flour with a pastry cutter, or pulse with food processor, until it is the size and texture of cornmeal.

3. Add remaining ½ cup shortening or stick Earth Balance and cut into the flour with cutter, or pulse with food processor, until it is the size of small green peas.

4. Slowly drizzle 1 Tablespoon of water at a time and blend just until dough forms a ball or comes together so it doesn’t break apart.

5. Take a tablespoon of dough, roll it out and if it cracks or falls apart, you need more water. If the dough is sticky, you added too much water. If it is too sticky, add 1-2 Tablespoons of flour. The humidity in the air will determine how much water you will need.

6. Cut dough in half and wrap in plastic and refrigerate or put into a freezer zip bag and freeze until ready to use. Thaw in refrigerator for 8 hours.

When ready to make the pie:

1. Between two pieces of plastic wrap or on a well-floured board, roll out the dough -when rolling dough, roll once with even pressure and turn a quarter turn and continue rolling and turning until it is ¼ inch thick. If it sticks, add more flour to board. Only roll out one time or it will become tough instead of flakey. Brush off any excess flour with a dry pastry or basting brush.

2. If using plastic remove the top piece of plastic and lift up the bottom piece of plastic holding the dough and flip it over into a pie pan and peel off the plastic.

3. If using a floured board, gently roll the dough around the rolling pin, start at the edge of the pie pan, and unroll it over the pie pan. If it sticks to the board, slide a long flat spatula under it.

4. Roll out remaining half of dough after you have filled the pie and are ready to bake it. Dough can be frozen up to 6 months if double wrapped in plastic and then put into a zip freezer bag. It will keep in the refrigerator for a few days.

Step 2: Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free Mushroom Pot Pie Filling

Portobello mushrooms have a meat like texture a make great vegetarian main dish!

1 small organic yellow onion, diced
1 cup sliced organic carrots
4 stalks organic celery, sliced
2 large Portobello mushrooms, cubed or 4 cups crimini mushroom caps, halved
1/3 cup dry sherry
1 cup organic frozen petite green peas
1 bunch organic flat Italian parsley, chopped
4 Tablespoons organic oat flour
4 Tablespoons organic grape seed oil or extra virgin olive oil
2 cups organic vegetable stock or broth
salt/pepper to taste
2 teaspoons dried herbs (thyme, basil, savory, marjoram or your favorite)
1 recipe of pie crust, unbaked

1. Preheat oven to 375° F. Roll out half the pie dough to ¼ inch thick and about 1 inch wider than your pie pan, place in pie pan, refrigerate for 30 minutes or more. Keep the other half of dough refrigerated.

2. In a large pot, sauté onions, carrots, celery and mushrooms over medium high heat until soft. Add ¼ cup dry sherry and cook for 1 minute until liquid has cooked down.

3. In the same pot add oil and flour and whisk over medium high heat until bubbling and then cook an additional 2 minutes. Slowly add the vegetable stock while whisking vigorously to avoid lumps.

4. Bring the pot to a boil and add all of the mushrooms, vegetables, frozen green peas and chopped parsley. Add herbs, pepper and salt if needed. Mix everything together and pour into pie pan lined with dough.

5. Roll out remaining half of dough about 1 inch wider than pie pan, cut a ½ inch hole in the middle and place over the top of the pie, and crimp the edges as you like.

6. For fewer calories, omit the bottom crust. Bake pie on the middle rack for 1 hour or until it is bubbling in the middle. Remove from oven, let it cool for 5-10 minutes, serve and enjoy.

7. This will keep in the refrigerator and make great leftovers for a few days. Do not freeze after baked. If you want to make it ahead, you can freeze it before you bake it and just bake it while frozen, but add more cooking time.

Enjoy!

Lauren has appeared and cooked on “ABC Live” in Chicago and Sacramento. She has cooked for 4 United States Presidents and a United States Senator.

Lauren Hoover-West was classically trained at The California Culinary Academy. She is a Chef/Educator/Consultant specializing in food allergies and health issues, including Diabetes, Autism, Celicac Disease, Autoimmune diseases and inflammatory conditions. Lauren has created a revolutionary way to cook delicious food that is gluten-free, dairy-free, low glycemic index and very healthy.

She is the author of No Wheat No Dairy No Problem cookbook and blog site. She has 20 years of cooking and teaching experience at La Folie (Michelin star), Fairmont, Hyatt Resorts, Bally’s, Marriott etc… Lauren is the owner of Lauren’s Kitchen Biscotti Company. She also earned a Bachelor of Science in Psychology. For more information go to her blog www.NoWheatNoDairyNoProblem.com.

“Not From Your Grocery Store” Icewine Marshmallows

Posted on: June 9th, 2012 by Carla Johnson No Comments

Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"“You’re a marshmallow. Soft and sweet and when you get heated up you go all gooey and delicious.” ~ Janet Evanovich, One For The Money

For most of my life I thought marshmallows were the simple candy treat you buy in a bag at the grocery store. Simple and inexpensive, they make great rice crisp treats and I love roasting them for S’mores over campfires at our family cabin.

Camping enthusiasts know that roasting a marshmallow on a stick over the coals of an open fire is truly an art. You want a crispy, toasty brown colour on the outside and slightly melted, warm & soft on the inside, but the temperature must be not be too hot. A burnt lip or tongue will definitely spoil the fun.

I also have a soft spot on my palate for the chocolate covered, heart-shaped marshmallows on a stick you can buy at the corner store for Valentine’s Day. A few years ago, my eyes were opened to a whole new marshmallow landscape when I found out that Reid Chocolates, our local, wonderful chocolatier made their own marshmallow for their seasonal treats. Their soft, tasty chocolate-coated sweets took marshmallow to a whole new level. I was a convert!

Chef Jason Parsons, Executive Chef at Peller Estates Winery Restaurant and the creator of this recipe, claims it is a fool-proof recipe, but I was still really happy that my friend Connie Campbell tested the recipe instead of me. She is a passionate, brilliant chef. If you know me, I don’t even consider myself a proper cook. Connie did a great job and you can read about it on her blog post “Icewine Marshmallows… or should I say Marshmellow…?

I didn’t ask Connie if she would use them in S’mores, but I think a light coating of chocolate might be perfect.

Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"

Icewine Marshmallows - all photos on this post are courtesy of Connie Campbell

“Not From Your Grocery Store” Icewine Marshmallows

 
3/4 cup Icewine (Connie used red)
3 envelopes unflavoured gelatin
3/4 cup water
2 cups sugar
2/3 cup corn syrup
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon vanilla (Connie used a clear vanilla)
¼ cup icing sugar (more if needed)
 
Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"
 
  1. Line a 9-inch square pan with oiled plastic wrap.
  2. Pour Icewine in a small saucepan over medium heat and simmer for several minutes until reduced to approximately 4 teaspoons. It will be a thick syrup. Watch closely to prevent scorching. Let cool.
  3. In a mixer bowl, pour 1/2 cup of water and sprinkle with gelatin. Let stand 10 minutes to let it soften.
  4. While the gelatin sits, combine remaining water, sugar and corn syrup in a saucepan. Bring to a boil until it reaches 240°F the “soft ball” candy stage.
  5. Stir the sugar-syrup mixture into gelatin mixture along with the salt. Beat with whisk on high speed for eight minutes.
  6. Add the reduced Icewine and vanilla. Continue beating for 2 more minutes.
  7. Transfer mixture to the lined pan. Use an oiled spatula to spread evenly.
  8. Allow to set several hours in a cool area, but non-refrigerated.
  9. When the marshmallow mixture is firm, remove from the pan. Cut into squares with a lightly oiled knife and coat each square in icing sugar.

Tip! When you cut the marshmallow be sure to pull the pieces apart or they will join back together again becoming “uncut.”

Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"

Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"

Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"

The marshmallow mush took over Connie's food processor!

 

Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"

The Marshmallow plant

Marshmallow probably first came into being as a medicinal substance, since the mucilaginous extracts come from the root of the marshmallow plant, Althaea officinalis, which were used as a remedy for sore throats. Concoctions of other parts of the marshmallow plant had medical uses as well. The root has been used since Egyptian antiquity in a honey-sweetened confection useful in the treatment of sore throat. The later French version of the recipe, called pâte de guimauve (or “guimauve” for short), included an egg white meringue and was often flavored with rose water.Pâte de guimauve more closely resembles contemporary commercially available marshmallows, which no longer contain any marshmallow plant. The use of marshmallow to make a sweet dates back to ancient Egypt, where the recipe called for extracting sap from the plant and mixing it with nuts and honey.

~ Wikipedia “Marshmallow”

Gin & Tonic Sorbet

Recently, Connie sent me a picture of a recipe she and a friend found online for Gin & Tonic Sorbet. They tried it out and found it “yummy and very sweet.” I told her that at some point we need to publish “Cooking With Sin With Connie” because she is such a rich source of interesting food and recipes.

Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"

G & T Sorbet

  • 400ml cold water
  • 300g caster sugar
  • 300ml tonic water
  • gin to taste – around 50ml
  • juice of 2 lemons
  • 1 tablespoon glucose (optional)

 Carla Johnson "Cooking With Sin"

Here is the original recipe from Walnut Grove Cookery in France.

See Connie’s other posts here on “Cooking With Sin”

“Oops I Did It Again” Bouillabaisse

“Good Neighbour” Gluten-Free Beer Braised Beef

200,000 Visitors! Sticky Buns for Everyone!

Posted on: April 1st, 2012 by Carla Johnson No Comments

A big “Thank You” to Everyone for your Support!

😆

Looks like I blinked and missed the 200,000th new visitor to Cooking With Sin! Oh well, let’s celebrate with Grammy Moon’s Sticky Buns with rum!

By the way, don’t you just love my title. Tee-hee!

Cooking With Sin, Carla Johnson,

Over the winter I was laid up recuperating from major surgery. I had a total knee replacement in my right knee. (I like to say I’m on my way to becoming the Bionic Woman.) During my recuperation I kept busy writing posts and I also developed a mild addiction to Cheers & Frasier reruns.

On one of the Frasier episodes, Daphne makes her Grammy’s sticky buns for breakfast, so I found a simple recipe for sticky bun sauce with rum.

Enjoy!

“I decided to prepare you a traditional English breakfast…and to finish it off, a batch of Granny Moon’s famous sticky buns. Granny made these every Sunday. Of course, she always added a pint of rum to the recipe. Nobody liked these more than Granny herself. Many’s the Sunday I’d head over to her house after church, only to find her out in the garden in her wedding dress, face down in the birdbath.”

~ Daphne Moon, character from the TV show “Frasier”

Grammy Moon’s Sticky Buns with Rum

Step 1: Bake a dozen of your favourite cinnamon buns.

Go ahead and cheat with the store bought cinnamon bun dough that you unroll and bake. I won’t tell! 😉

You will want to pull them fresh from the oven just as the sauce is ready. Most sticky bun recipes bake the buns with the sauce in the bottom of the pan or muffin tin where it can candy a bit. With this recipe, we are candying the sauce in a pan and pouring it over the buns after they are baked.

Step 2: Prepare the Sticky Rum Sauce

1/2 cup dark brown sugar

5 tablespoons unsalted butter

3 tablespoons dark rum

2.5 tablespoons sweetened condensed milk

2 tablespoons water

2 tablespoons light sour cream

1 1/2 tablespoons corn syrup

1/4 teaspoon salt

1/8 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/8 teaspoon baking powder

1 cup chopped pecans, toasted, optional

 

1. In a small saucepan, stir in the brown sugar, butter, rum, condensed milk, water, sour cream and corn syrup. Bring to a boil then simmer on medium heat until slightly thick, about 2 minutes.

2. Take the pan off of the heat. Stir in the salt, vanilla and baking powder.

3. Take the fresh baked buns out of the pan and pour the glaze over each one. Sprinkle with the pecans, if you wish. Let stand until the glaze is absorbed a bit by the buns and they are cool enough to eat. Serve them while they are still warm.

Adapted from Food & Wine, January 2010

Here is a clip of the Frasier episode about Grammy Moon’s sticky buns. Just brilliant!

 See how we celebrated at the 100,000th visitor.

“100,000 Visitors! Rum Cake for Everyone!”