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Posts Tagged ‘vegan recipe’

Vegan Ghormeh Sabzi + Pistachio Kheer

Monday, September 19th, 2011 by Mich Masoch

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch - Vegan Ghormeh Sabzi

vegan ghormeh sabzi ... none of the meat, but all of the sexy

This week was my birthday weekend, so we prepared an immense feast of Persian and Indian fusion for a few good friends. The recipes I created for that night will start sneaking into Meatless Mondays over time. I won’t hit you all at once, because there were quite a few. We’ll toss it up with new cuisines in between.

 

For today, I’ll just give you the biggest successes of the night.

 

Ghormeh sabzi really should be considered a treasured gift from Iran to the rest of the world. It is one of the sexiest-tasting things you will ever eat. So, of course, I wanted to share it with my vegetarian and vegan friends, too. This recipe skips the traditional lamb and adds a little savory Aleppo pepper to kick up the sexiness. I will tell you up front, though. Persian food is more like a meditation on food than a cuisine. It is some of the best food you will ever eat, but it doesn’t come easy. This is food which requires a bit of patience, being food which was perfected long before modern conveniences were even a glimmer of a seed of an idea. You will not regret the time you spend chopping and mincing or needing to stick around at home for the long-slow cooking process. You will taste every moment in the food.

 

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch - Pistachio Kheer

kheer ... one of the best things you'll ever put in your mouth

I’ll confess something to y’all; in all my years of cooking, I’ve always avoided anything which involved boiling milk. The idea of it frothing and bubbling up, maybe scorching, freaked me out. But, since I really wanted a special dessert which had roots and flavor profiles in Indian and Persian cuisines, I finally got myself over the hump to make a batch of kheer (Indian rice pudding).

 

What got me over, you might ask? A lovely Indian lady named Manjula who has videos on YouTube and a site with her collected recipes calmed my nerves enough to give it a shot. Boy am I glad I did, because her recipe for kheer is one the best things I’ve ever put in my mouth. I skipped the other add-ins and just put ¼ cup of pistachos (because I REALLY love pistachios, especially with saffron), but that’s all the tinkering I did. It’s bloody perfect as is. I would recommend making some as soon as possible.

 

You can find the recipe on Manjula’s site.

 

Here’s a good tip for managing kheer: use a flame/heat diffuser (see the photo) if you don’t have a heavy-bottomed pot handy. Also, if you have a kitchen timer, set it for 4 minutes and gently break the skin, stirring while scraping the bottom of the pot with a spatula every time it goes off for about 40-60 minutes … I lost track of time, so added a photo of what the pudding looked like in the pan before I chilled it. I’ve included a pic of the bubbling pot because, though it looks a little dire and panic-inspiring, it’s fine and exactly how it should look. Now that I’m over my irrational fear of boiling milk, I’m looking forward to making this regularly when I have a meal that causes me to be in the kitchen for a while anyway. It’s so good, I already want another bowl … like right now.

 

Here is the video of Manjula making kheer. Look for her video on making paneer, too. It is, by far, one of the most helpful I’ve ever seen.

 

Anyway, enough other stuff, here’s the meatless ghormeh sabzi recipe!

 

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch - Vegan Ghormeh Sabzi

vegan ghormeh sabzi

Vegan Ghormeh Sabzi
serves at least 6-8

3 TBSP olive oil (replace with ghee for vegetarian – see notes *)
2 small/med yellow onions – minced
1 small red onion – minced
4 cloves garlic – finely minced
at least 2 lbs baby spinach – finely chopped (see notes **)
1 bunch – cilantro – finely chopped
1 bunch – Italian (flat leaf) parsley – finely chopped
2 bunches scallions – finely chopped
2 bunches garlic chives – finely chopped
¼ – ⅓ cup mint – finely chopped (to taste)
1 TBSP turmeric
1 TBSP Aleppo pepper (more if you like spicy … just add near the end so you don’t blow your tongue off when it reduces)
juice of 1 largish lemon
juice of 1 lime
healthy pinch of saffron (20+ threads)
1 cup water
- optional: a few dried limes – pierced (see notes ***)
1 can (14.5 oz) red kidney beans – drained and rinsed
kosher salt – to taste

 

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch - Vegan Ghormeh Sabzi

flame diffuser ... you want one!

 

Step 1: Chop (and chop … and chop … and chop …)
Here is the thing about ghormeh sabzi: it requires a good bit of preparation before starting the cooking process. It’s a good chance to polish the knife skills that much more, right?

 

Step 2: The base
In a large (heavy-bottomed if possible) pot, heat the oil (or ghee) on MEDIUM and cook the onions sprinkled with a touch of salt until they are almost translucent. This usually takes a little longer with red onions, but the subtly different flavor is worth it. Add the garlic and stir regularly for a few minutes, until it gets fragrant. Add the turmeric and Aleppo and mix well.

 

Step 3: The green stuff!
Add the spinach and herbs in large handfuls, stirring until the heat starts to wilt the leaves and reduce the volume before adding more. Sprinkle very lightly with salt, but only at the very beginning. (It is VERY easy to over-salt with a dish this much about reduction, so try to keep the salting at a minimum until you’re near the finished volume.) Keep doing this until all the greens are added. Then stir regularly until the greens are cooked down more and have released their liquid. Then add the remaining ingredients, except the kidney beans, and mix well. Allow the liquid to come to a bubble, then reduce to SIMMER, stirring occasionally for at least 2-3 hours. As the liquid cooks down, you will want to stir more frequently to avoid burning.

 

boiling milk = nothing to panic about

helpful tip: If you want to taste and adjust seasoning, wait until well into the cooking process. This is a very concentrated stew so, if you add too much too early, it will cook down and be very strong in the final dish.

 

Step 4: Final touches
About a half hour before serving, add the kidney beans and mix well. Serve over basmati rice (I like to use saffron plus butter and olive oil in the pot, along with a hint of salt when I cook mine.) or with flat bread.

 

Notes:
* Ghee is shelf-stable clarified butter. If you can get some, it will make a nice flavor difference in the finished dish. It is generally most easily found in Middle-eastern or Indian markets.

 

** If you go to a Middle-eastern market, you will find what is known as a “pillow pack”, which is a HUGE clear bag, stuffed with spinach. I will weigh one next time I hit the store, but I think it looks like the volume of 4 half-pound bags.

 

Bear in mind, my volume preference of the balance of herbs may not be yours. Tinker and adjust based on what flavor profile you’d like.

 

kheer is done

*** Dried limes are traditional in ghormeh sabzi, but hard to hunt down outside Middle-eastern markets and the interwubs. I prefer my stew with a few limes, pierced several times to release more flavor. The Boss does not agree and prefers the taste without. You might want to scare some up and try it if you like the idea of a hint of concentrated savory citrus bite. The taste is hard to describe, but similar to how drying dramatically intensifies the deep, low notes of a chili pepper and softens the sharper ones, but keeps the same general favor. Does that make sense?

 

Thanks for joining me for another Meatless Monday food experiment. Next time, we’ll go lighter and fresher, but with no less sexy. Until then, enjoy your week!

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Thai-inspired Hot and Sour Soup with Banh Mi Spring Rolls

Monday, August 29th, 2011 by Mich Masoch

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch: Thai-inspired Hot and Sour Soup with Banh Mi Spring Rolls

Spring rolls! CRUNCHCRUNCH! NOMNOMNOM!

After a few weeks of carb and dairy heavy meals, not to mention a bit of vacation excess by your author, it felt like a good time to lighten up. Fortunately, we’ll be playing with a fusion of Szechuan and Thai with a touch of Vietnamese so, even without the extra calories, we’ll get plenty of bold flavors and satisfying richness. It’s kind of like having a culinary Asian All-Star team on your plate.

If you’ve cooked in these cuisines, you’ll already know how long and intimidating many recipes can look, though they’re actually quite simple. There are a goodly amount of raw ingredients to prep, more than we’re used to seeing in general. It’s really no big deal … a little prep earlier in the day and a little doing instead of pot-watching later … not so bad, right?

You’ll also see, in the lists, a few exotic ingredients you’re unlikely to find at the the regular old supermarket (unless you live in an overwhelmingly Asian neighborhood). Even if you can find them at the mega-mart, I heartily recommend searching out a specialty ethnic market in your area or, in the case of some non-perishables, buying online for better quality and selection at a better price. You’ll be surprised what a windfall for your food budget a little side-trip to a locally-owned ethnic market can be. As a bonus, you get to stock up on great pantry items to cook your favorite cuisines throughout the month, plus give back to your local economy.

—-

So, this week’s recipe …

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch: Thai-inspired Hot and Sour Soup with Banh Mi Spring Rolls

Hot and sour soup = bliss in a bowl

I have what can only be called a deep and abiding love for Hot & Sour Soup. So, the idea of making a favorite so far off from what I’m used to felt a bit strange. H&S, as you probably know, is generally made with pork … often with chicken broth … not so appropriate for our Meatless dinner, so tinkering must be done to keep the soul of this satisfying soup and not feel like we’re missing those missing components. In the end, it seemed better to go further afield and tweak away over trying to remain too faithful. What resulted was a soup with the wonderful contrasts of the original plus a few more nuanced levels of flavor, lent by the Thai influence, between the sharp edges. It was definitely a food experiment I’ll be happy to make again, soon (and even happier to have leftovers to eat NOW).

To bring a deep meaty taste to the base broth, I decided on shiitake mushrooms, using both mushrooms in the stock as well as soaking water for additional mushrooms set aside for the finished soup. Rather than keep to Szechuan or even Chinese, ingredients, I looked to Thai cuisine, renowned for savory, full-bodied flavors without the use of meat. Instead of just ginger, garlic, and scallions as aromatics in the broth, I added galangal, lemon grass, cilantro, and shallot for more layered flavor balance. In the soup, fried chili garlic paste, lime, and tamarind provide savory heat, tart acidity, and umami counterpoints to the sharp acidic sweetness of the vinegars, soft twang of the rice wine, and clean heat of the white pepper. I kept the egg drop, since it’s so crucial to the mouth-happy feel of the soup and it’s great added protein, to boot.

To get some veg in, plus turn the tables on the cuisine fusion, I picked spring rolls as a fresh, crunchy foil to the thick, savory soup. In thinking about what tweaks might be tasty to the familiar Thai classic, I brought in a hint of Szechuan, as well as a touch of Vietnamese for good measure. Keeping the fresh, light feel of the original, I used a base of shredded veg, but replaced plain with a lightly marinaded/pickled version similar to that of a Vietnamese banh mi. I kept the fresh Thai basil in there because, well, it’s damned tasty, but added just a hint of mint, too. Then, I match-sticked  some firm tofu and soaked it through the afternoon in a Szechuan-influenced marinade to use in both the spring rolls and soup.

Here’s how it goes …

Thai-inspired Hot and Sour Soup with Banh Mi Spring Rolls
serves 6-8 depending upon portion sizes

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch: Thai-inspired Hot and Sour Soup with Banh Mi Spring Rolls

wet veg + spring roll wrapper = big fucking mess ... drain well!

Pickled Veg (in the style of Vietnamese banh mi)
⅓ cup sugar
1 TBSP kosher salt
2 cups hot water
2/3 cup white distilled vinegar
½ cup rice vinegar
¼ cup scallion greens only – very thinly sliced
1 cup daikon radish – shredded
1 cup carrot – shredded
1.5 cups bean sprouts
2 cups cabbage – shredded* (note in pre-prep)

Marinaded Tofu Matchsticks
1 pkg firm tofu (19 oz)
reserved tofu packaging water
4 TBSP black vinegar
3 TBSP Chinese rice wine
1.5 TBSP soy sauce
1 TBSP sesame oil
½ tsp tamarind concentrate
½ cup scallion light and white only – very thinly sliced

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch: Thai-inspired Hot and Sour Soup with Banh Mi Spring Rolls

banh mi spring rolls with dipping sauce

Spring Rolls
spring roll wrappers
dipping water
fresh Thai basil
mint
cilantro
lime wedges
* note: If you want a nice dipping sauce, try mixing together equal parts soy sauce and black vinegar with a splash of rice vinegar and sesame oil. Keep a little fried chili garlic paste at the table for diners to add a dash with their chopsticks if desired.

Soup Base
12 dried shiitake mushrooms
3 cups hot water
1 large handful (about 1 cup) shredded dried woodear mushroom
1 cup hot water

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch: Thai-inspired Hot and Sour Soup with Banh Mi Spring Rolls

soup base aromatics

6 cups water
(mushroom soaking water)
8 dried shiitake mushrooms
1 6-8” piece konbu seaweed – rinsed
2 pieces lemon grass – smashed and cut into pieces
3-4” piece of ginger – peeled and sliced no thicker than ¼”
6-8 ¼ – ⅓” slices galangal
½ cup cilantro stems (about 1 bunch) – cut into small pieces
4-6 cloves of garlic – peeled and smashed
2 small shallots – peeled and cut into small slices
¾ – 1 cup scallion white and light only – about 1 ½ bunches worth – cut into small pieces
1 TBSP soy sauce

*If we’d have had some available, I would also have added a handful of kaffir lime leaves, crumpled to release their oils.

Soup

Lip Service Meatless Monday recipe by Mich Masoch: Thai-inspired Hot and Sour Soup with Banh Mi Spring Rolls

Thai-inspired hot and sour soup

Mushroom broth ( base above)
shiitake mushrooms – all – stems removed and cut in julienned strips
woodear mushrooms – if not pre-shredded, cut in julienned strips
6 oz oyster mushrooms – stem ends removed and cut into julienned strips
4 TBSP soy sauce
3 TBSP rice wine
2 TBSP sesame oil
2 tsp tamarind concentrate
1 tsp fried chili garlic paste
1 tsp sugar
⅛ tsp ground white pepper
½ cup water chestnuts – minced
½ cup scallion greens only – thinly sliced
2 handfuls (as desired) bean sprouts
⅓ cup black vinegar
¼ cup rice vinegar
juice of 1 lime
3 TBSP corn starch
3 TBSP water
2 eggs – beaten well

*If I’d have made it to the further-out Chinese market, I’d have also added dried, reconstituted and julienned lily buds.

Pre-prep: (aprox 4-6 hours – or more – ahead)  Marinate vegetables and tofu
- In a large storage container or bowl, measure in sugar and salt then pour hot water over, stirring well until dissolved. Add vinegar and stir. As you prepare each vegetable, place them straight into the pickling mixture until all vegetables are done. Mix well and push gently over the top layer to help the vegetables submerge better. If possible, check once or twice during the 4 (or more) hour soak, mixing well and pushing down again.

*note: Like shredded cabbage in fish tacos, the cabbage in pickled veg doesn’t have enough time for the thicker spine bits to soften. Because of this, I’ll plan a different meal after these which calls for cooked cabbage. This way, I can cut off just the nicer-to-munch-raw tops of the leaves without wasting the other bits.

- Remove tofu pieces from the original container, saving the storage liquid. Slice the tofu, then slice further into small matchstick pieces and set aside. Add all marinade ingredients to the water in the original container and mix well. Place the tofu in a plastic bag and pour the marinade over, then squeeze out the air and store in the fridge. Like the veg, if possible, check on it during the process and flip the bag over.

Step 1: Soup Base
- In a large bowl, pour 3 cups hot water over 12 dried shiitake mushrooms. In another bowl, pour 1 cup of hot water over the woodear mushrooms (black fungus). Let them soak for about a half hour, then squeeze out excess water back into the bowl and set them aside for later.
- In a soup pot, heat all soup base ingredients on HIGH just until the pot comes to a boil. Then, remove from heat and let steep for 15 minutes. Remove konbu and return to a boil, then reduce to SIMMER for 1 hour. (This is an excellent time to slice mushrooms and prep herbs and ingredients for spring rolls … just sayin’ … You’ll also definitely want to put your pickled vegetables in a strainer over a bowl at least an hour before you intend to eat. Drippy veg + spring roll wrappers = big fucking mess.)
- Set shiitakes aside until cool enough to handle and strain the broth. Squeeze out any excess moisture in the mushrooms back into the pot.

Step 2: It’s SOUP!
- In the soup pot, return the base broth and add all the ingredients before the vinegar. Once the
bean sprouts are cooked as you like, add the vinegars and lime juice and stir.
- In a small bowl or cup, mix the corn starch and water very well, until perfectly smooth, and slowly pour in and stir until the soup is thickened.
- Slowly drizzle in the beaten eggs in small threads at the surface of the soup. (If you need to do several rounds to keep big glops of egg from forming, that’s swell!) Give it a moment or two to start to cook, then stir around to make egg threads. Repeat until egg is all incorporated.

Step 3: Serve!
- This is where your clever decision to prep the spring rolls while the base cooked pays off. The grooviest thing about spring rolls is that everyone can make theirs however they like. So just set out nifty ready to stuff ingredients with your wrappers and a water bowl to dunk them in. Then you can ladle out your soup and dig in!

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Meatless Monday Comfort Food, Island-style

Sunday, August 7th, 2011 by Mich Masoch

One of the most common misconceptions of going meatless is that it is less hearty, not quite as satisfying. We all love our comfort food. Of course, vegetarian and vegan food have gotten a fairly bad rap, especially here in the meat-loving States. Ask a random sampling of people what they think of the two Vs and you’ll probably get a lot responses equating veg eating to rabbit food or the like. Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzt! Wrong.

Check out this meal for poor, delicate vegan waifs …

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch - Tostones and Vegan Black Bean Chili

Tostones and Vegan Black Bean Chili

Looks pretty homey, hearty, and satisfying, right? That’s because it is. Just say the word tostones to anyone from Cuba, Puerto Rico, or the general vicinity and watch their mouths water as a big smile lights up their face. This is island comfort food of the highest order, a family favorite Mamas and Abuelitas cook with love. Think of latkes (potato pancakes), dumplings, or other starch-based dishes and move them to the tropics, and you have tostones.

Of course, like man cannot live on bread alone, you shouldn’t eat just tostones for dinner (though you’ll be really tempted). For your veg, plus protien, make a rich, “meaty” foil for your tostones, a zesty quick chili with black beans. Since you’re skipping meat, all that cooking time usually associated with chili is unneccessary. The time it takes to make your tostones is plenty to bring all the flavors together. If you’d like to slow-cook longer, you certainly can; it’s nice, but an extra touch.

Tostones is just one of countless delicious, satisfying comfort foods for your meatless menu. All home cooking is not created equal; most cuisines have a rich tradition of meatless cooking, thus more meatless comfort foods. That’s one of the best side benefits of going meatless I’ve found, an additional excuse to explore the homier roots of my favorite cuisines. This is where the best and heartiest meatless fare, as well as the most budget-friendly, is always going to be found. It makes sense, of course, since home-cooking (especially of the peasant food kind) is meant to be comforting, and nutritious, yet economical. Check out traditional Mom-food recipes of most cuisines and you’ll find plenty of great ideas for meatless meals.

I’ll be back with another of mine next Meatless Monday!
Until then, have a great week!

recipe serves 4 dinner portions

Tostones

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch - Tostones and Vegan Black Bean Chili

Tostones and Vegan Black Bean Chili

3 plantains (mottled in color for good balance of starchy/sweet)
canola or vegetable oil
water + salt bath (aprox 1/4 cup to a large pyrex bowl)
1 head garlic – minced (do not skimp on this or you will be sad later)

¼ cup olive oil
6 cloves garlic – finely minced
pinch red pepper flakes (if you like it spicy)

salt (to taste)

Vegan Black Bean Quick Chili

olive oil

1 red onion – minced
6 cloves garlic – minced fine
2 fire-roasted red peppers
1 can (28 oz) whole tomatoes – diced in their juice
1 can black beans (rinsed if not a no-salt variety)
1 TBSP  pasilla/ancho dried chili – ground fine
1/4 tsp cumin
¼ cup cilantro – minced

Step 1: Prep
Pre-heat oven to WARM … fire-roast peppers (if you can) and mince (reserve pepper water), prepare other ingredients while peppers cool enough to handle

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch - Tostones and Vegan Black Bean Chili

cut down the length of the plantain with a paring knife to peel

Step 2: Prep the plantains
Mix the salt water bath (salt will dissolve more easily if you use a little warm water first, stir until dissolved, then add cold water) and add minced garlic. The bath should have a strong-ish taste, since the plantains must absorb the flavor. Cut both ends of the plantains and peel, then cut into aprox 1.5-2” slices. (Rinse hands and tools as you go to avoid the starch staining and getting tacky.) As you cut pieces, put them into the water/salt/garlic bath to soak for 20-30 minutes. Mix the extra garlic in olive oil (plus red pepper flake), and set aside until needed.

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch - Tostones and Vegan Black Bean Chili

my super-classy mise en place

Step 3: Make the chili
In a pot, heat oil to MED and add onion, stirring until they go translucent. Add garlic, red pepper, tomatoes and mix well, stirring until garlic begins to cook (You will know because you can smell its fragrance). Add all other ingredients, as well as the reserved tomato juice,  and mix well. Once the pot is bubbling lightly, reduce heat to SIMMER and stir regularly until ready to serve.

Step 4: Start the tostones

Heat about 2″ of frying oil in a large pot to MED (You can use a skillet but, if you are a novice deep fryer, you’ll want higher sides for more protection – oil burns are no fun.). Remove plantain slices from the water to dry (a cookie sheet with paper towels works nicely). Wet + Frying = not a great idea. When oil is ready, fry batches of the plantain for about 3-5 minutes, until they are soft and golden, and set aside until all plantain pieces are done.

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch - Tostones and Vegan Black Bean Chili

Plantains? I wanna smash 'em!

Step 5: Smash ‘em!
Here’s the fun playing-with-your-food part. Turn your oil up slightly to MED HIGH. Get two large pieces of wax paper (if you don’t have any, a couple of plastic food storage bags will do). Take a piece of plantain and set it between the sheets. Then, using a large spatula, rice paddle, or even the bottom of a large mug (big + mostly flat is the key), smash the plantain piece until it’s a large, rough disc about ⅓ – ¼ “ thick. Fry again until they’re crispy and golden brown, about 3-4 minutes per batch. Remove from oil and set on a draining sheet, brushing lightly with the oil/garlic mix and sprinkling lightly with salt before storing in the warm oven. Repeat the process for each batch until all plantain pieces are done.

Step 6: Serve, eat, and make nomnom noises!

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Meatless Monday Recipe: Vegan Miso Soup with Soba Noodles and Mushrooms

Sunday, July 31st, 2011 by Mich Masoch

Please pardon the iPhone pics. There wasn’t time to shoot proper food porn of this week’s meal.

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch: Vegan Miso Soup with Mushrooms and Soba

Vegan Miso Soup with Mushrooms and Soba

In many parts of the world, the idea of going meatless is not a new or novel approach to eating. Being part of affluent (and, let’s admit, indulgent) cultures, it’s easy to forget there are many people for whom a mostly meatless diet is historically the norm. These cultures’ cuisines are a great place to look for delicious, healthy ideas for your Meatless Monday menus, so don’t overlook them.

 

Few cuisines make the most of every ingredient while retaining clean, simple flavors like Japanese. Though many of us may picture standard sushi bar fare when thinking about Japanese food, there is an extensive variety outside raw fish, teriyaki, and tempura in the cuisine. The beauty is, the approach remains the same, simple clean flavors with an economy of common ingredients. Later, we’ll get into Japanese home cooking and pub (izakaya) fare but, for today, we’ll keep it super-simple with vegan miso soup and soba noodles, a great light dish for hot summer nights.

 

Dashi is the master broth of many Japanese recipes, so a great staple for starting to explore Japanese cuisine. Granted, traditional dashi requires katsuobushi (shaved bonito), so we’ll tinker a bit to make it appropriate for Meatless Monday by substituting mushrooms, which will offer their own hearty umami flavor.  The upside: an additional treat (the cooked mushrooms) to add to your meal.

 

Konbu

Having moved from the melting pot of Southern California to not-so-diverse Florida, I know how difficult it can be to find authentic ingredients outside larger cities. Sometimes, specialty food chains carry a wide assortment of ethnic ingredients, but often at a premium. This is mind, I went a step further and substituted the more common brown crimini mushrooms instead of my favorite shitakes, just to be sure the broth will work using the most affordable and easiest-to-get ingredients. I’m fairly sure konbu, the seaweed base of dashi, should be available at any specialty or gourmet market at an affordable price. Of course, this is a must-have for making dashi, so has no appropriate substitute, anyway. Hopefully, you can get your hands on some, if not in person, then online. (Many authentic dried and non-perishable ingredients are available to order on the interwebs.)

 

Always make sure to check for ethnic markets in your area, too. They may be a little off your beaten path, but are worth the trip to get great ingredients, often at a significantly lower cost. Think of it this way, unless you live near a cultural enclave, your regular grocery store will consider ethnic ingredients as specialty items (and we all know what happens to prices when that happens). An ethnic market will consider those same items pantry staples, ingredients people buy (and they turn over) regularly, so the costs will reflect that shift in perception. If you’re not sure where to find markets, check out some of the great food resources online, like the helpful community at Chowhound.

 

Okay, enough of my yammering … let’s make some Meatless Monday dinner!

Vegan Miso Soup with Soba and Mushrooms

serves 4 dinner portions

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch: Vegan Miso Soup

Vegan Miso Soup

6 cups water
2 pieces of konbu (rinsed) – aprox 5×5″ each
ginger – peeled and sliced to 1/4″ (using a piece aprox 2″ wide by 4-6″ long, to taste)
6 scallions – whites and light green parts cut in 1″ long pieces and green ends  sliced thin to garnish
1 TBSP soy sauce
1 TBSP sesame oil
24 mushrooms – whole with stems trimmed (Use fresh or reconstituted dried shitake mushrooms -plus their steeping water- if available. If not, brown crimini mushrooms will work just fine.)
1 lb package of soba noodles
1/2 to 1 lb firm tofu (depending on desired portion size)
2-4 TBSP light (aka) miso paste (to taste) - You can also use heartier miso pastes, but it is not recommended since their stronger flavors can overpower this lighter, vegan base broth.
wakame seaweed for garnish (if available – may also be labelled “healthy sea vegetable”)

Step 1: The first step to making a Japanese base broth is steeping your konbu and aromatics. Grab a nice, big pot and measure in 6 cups of water (yes, water). Add the konbu, ginger, and white/light scallion.

Step2: Turn your burner to HIGH and let the water come just to the point where it’s about to boil. (You’ll see little bubbles starting to form and a soft rumbling on the surface.) Take the pot off the heat and let steep for about 25 minutes. (The time-frame is longer for this vegan version to infuse more flavor.)

Step 3: While your base is steeping, start up a pot of boiling water for the soba noodles and prep your mushrooms and tofu (as well as any other veg you’d like to add to your soup bowl or sides – see suggestions).

Step 4: Remove the konbu from the pot (For bonus Cheap Bastard points, set it aside to use later, like wrapping around fish or vegetables and steaming). Add your mushrooms, soy, and sesame and heat on HIGH just until the pot starts to boil. Then reduce to SIMMER for 15 minutes.

Step 5: While your mushrooms simmer, cook your soba noodles according to the package instructions. Once done, strain well while rinsing with cold water.

Step 6: Pinch off small amounts of soba noodles and rinse as a small strand, then lay each strand out on your plate in small sections for easy portioning. Set the noodles aside while you finish the soup.

Step 7: Remove the mushrooms from the pot and portion out into small bowls. Then strain the broth (if desired … this will prevent any accidental ginger-eating) and return it to the pot. Bring the broth to a boil and measure out 2-3 TBSP of your miso into a small bowl.

Step 8: Once the broth is bubbling, remove it from the heat and ladle a small amount into the miso bowl. Mix well (a small whisk is ideal for this), then add the miso base back to the broth while stirring well. Taste and repeat mixing miso base

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch: Vegan Miso Soup

The little bubbles tell you it's ready to steep

in 1TBSP increments until the soup is flavored as you like.

Step 9: In a soup bowl, add tofu, wakame, and scallion greens and ladle the soup over (to reconstitute the wakame). Serve immediately with the soba and mushrooms.

 

Other groovy suggestions:

Want a more substantial bowl of soup? Add some fresh vegetables before ladling in your soup. Just a few options are: shredded carrots, cabbage, and daikon radish; lightly steamed cabbage; bean sprouts; minced water chestnut; sliced bamboo shoots; chopped spinach; steamed broccoli.

 

Not a fan of tofu but still want to get your protein? Make a delicious miso porridge-like soup by substituting egg for tofu and steamed rice for noodles. This, of course, will render your vegan soup vegetarian, but still meatless. Before you add your miso base, keep the broth boiling and reserve a bit more in case you need to make more miso base. Beat 4 eggs well in a spouted vessel (like a pyrex measuring cup). Pour the beaten egg into the bubbling broth in a thin stream while stirring vigorously to create little ribbons of egg. Let the egg strands cook for a few moments until they set before removing the pot from the heat to add your miso base. If the taste is right for you, add the reserved broth back to the pot; otherwise, use it to mix more  miso base. When serving, instead of noodles on the side, add steamed rice to your soup bowl (along with the wakame and scallion garnishes) and ladle the soup over to make a hearty, porridge-like soup great on cold days for any meal.

 

Braise some baby bok choy in a cup of your base broth (without miso) for a great vegetable side. Add a cup of water plus a little extra of your base ingredients at the start of cooking to have enough broth for braising liquid. Clean the bok choy well and cut into quarters length-wise. Bring the braising liquid to a boil, then add the bok choy and stir until the edges of the leaves just start to wilt. Then, cover and simmer at the lowest heat possible until the thicker portions of the stalk are cooked through (this should probably take about 20-30 minutes). Bring extra flavor to your bok choy by adding a bit of soy, sesame oil, ginger, etc. to the base broth for your braising liquid.

 

Lip Service Meatless Monday by Mich Masoch: Vegan Miso Soup with Mushrooms and Soba

Mushrooms and soba, ready to serve

Spinach also works great with Japanese flavors and is readily available anywhere. Heat a TBSP each of canola and sesame oil on MED in a large pot. Add a TBSP of minced garlic and 1 tsp grated ginger. (Porcelain ginger graters are readily available at Japanese markets or online and are a HUGE time/energy saver.) Stir well for about a minute. Add spinach by the handful, stirring until the leaves begin to wilt before adding more. Then, add a drizzle each of soy and rice vinegar and mix well until all the spinach is completely wilted and flavors are incorporated. Serve immediately.

 

Pickles are a tasty Japanese staple food. One to three days before your meal, prep your vegetables (slice or shred into small pieces) and let them brine in the fridge in a mix of 2 TBSP kosher salt, ¼ cup sugar, 2 cups hot water, and 1 cup vinegar (or a touch more to taste if you like tart pickles – rice, cider, or plain old white vinegar work well), maybe even a touch of soy if you’d like to add some umami saltiness. If you want to get a little tricky (and spicy), try adding a bit of wasabi or a few Thai red chili peppers to the mix. If the brine doesn’t cover your vegetables, mix another batch more until it does; your vegetables need to be immersed. Mix well a couple times a day. Your pickled vegetables will keep in the fridge for at least a week, so make extras to munch as a healthy, crunchy snack. Some readily-available vegetables that work great for quick, cold pickling are Persian cucumbers (or peeled/seeded regular cukes), radish, daikon radish, shredded cabbage, shredded carrots, cauliflower, green beans, and green tomatoes.

Well, that’s the Meatless Monday lot for this week. Hope your week is a good one! See you next week with more recipes and food porn!

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