Showing posts with label Breakfast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breakfast. Show all posts

Monday, 3 February 2014

CHOCOLATE AND RYE MUFFINS + SAN DIEGO

5 comments:

It's been a while since I last wrote a post. I've been busy; traveling, cooking, spending quality time with friends and most of all, having a great time. Im in California baby, yeah! The weather here is So amazing I can't even believe we are in the middle of  winter, honestly, It couldn't be better.  We are here visiting friends and escaping from the european winter. Im so lucky you know? Just to be here, enjoying  the most amazing sunsets in La Jolla, the best Mexican food (tofu tacos on white corn tortillas with brown rice and black beans?! mmmm), being able to practice Bikram Yoga almost every day, having delicious smoothies and green juices but above all,  having very unique company.

This month I'll be attending some raw food workshops at Matthew Kenney in Santa Monica, I'm really looking forward to it, so I'll keep you posted.

In the meantime I want to share this  chocolate muffins recipe because they are just out of this world. The recipe is from Green Kitchen Stories, I've just adapted it slightly.



Chocolate and rye muffins
Makes 12 large muffins

1 cup of rye flour
1 cup of whole wheat flour
6 tbsp cacao powder
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
3 eggs
1 cup coconut milk
2/3 cup agave syrup
2/3 cup coconut oil
100 grs. 75% dark chocolate, coarsely chopped

Preheat oven to 200 C degrees. Mix all the dry ingredients in a bowl. Slightly beat the eggs in a separate bowl, then add the coconut milk, the agave syrup, the coconut oil and half of the chopped chocolate. Add the dry ingredients to the wet mixture. Fold everything together until just combined then divide the batter into the muffin tins and sprinkle the rest to the chocolate on top. Bake for about 16 minutes. They are delicious when eaten warm!

Thank you Green Kitchen!


Sunday, 13 October 2013

CAROB CAKE

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It's been a very busy week, so busy I haven't been able to cook much at home. The weather is beautiful and Im really enjoying it. So happy the rain hasn't arrived yet! I made this cake some time ago. A friend of mine kept asking me for a nice carob cake so I came up with this recipe. If you don't have carob you can replace it with cacao powder. Its a very moist cake and not too sweet, perfect for tea time with a nice cup of tea.
The pictures where taken by my friend Lorena Alaniz, thank you Lore!


Carob Cake

Ingredients:

150 grs brown spelt flour
50 grs carob flour
150 gr oats (fast cooking)
10 grs baking powder
pinch of salt
200 grs jaggery or brown sugar
3 eggs
200 ml water
80 ml coconut oil/ canola oil or any other oil you want
1 tsp vanilla
a handfull of dried fruit/seeds/nuts of choice

Directions:

Pre-heat oven at 176 C degrees. Butter a 12x 22cm / 5 by 9 inch  loaf pan.
In a bowl combine the flours, oats, baking powder, salt and sugar. In a separate bowl mix all the wet ingredients; eggs, water, oil and vanilla. Add the dry ingredients to the wet and mix until just incorporated. Add the nuts/seeds/dried fruit. Do not over mix.
Add the mix to the prepared tin and bake for 1 hour or until a tester inserted into the cake comes out clean. Let cool in the pan on a wire rack for 20 minutes. Remove from the pan, let cool completely before cutting.

I know...it's hard to wait, but try! If not the cake will crumble apart.



I hope you like the recipe, it's different and really easy to make. Wish you all the best for the next week.
Lots of love,xx



Friday, 4 October 2013

SWEET SAFFRON AND MANGO LASSI

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Hey folks! I can't believe we are having such a wonderfull weather. Oh my, yesterday we had 34 C degrees!, Im  in Andalusia's heaven. This is the time of the year where I feel SO grateful to be able to enjoy this "extension" of summer. Days are getting shorter little by little, and yes, it is cooler during the evenings but temperatures during the day are incredibly high, so Im having the best of the two worlds.
It's been a busy week as my little sis came to visit us, and we've been cooking and walking and doing sightseeing, etc. While thinking of my next recipe I suddenly came up with the idea of preparing a lassi. Mainly for two reasons. First one;  I've been day dreaming this last months about my beloved India, trying to organise a trip any time soon, yet not confirmed :( . And second, it was something completely new for my sister.


A lassi  is a traditional yogurt based drink from India. Basically is yogurt mixed with water and sometimes spices, fresh herbs, fruit or just plain with a little bit of salt. Over there they usually have it with their meals. Ayurveda says that a cup of lassi at the end of a meal also aids the digestive process. Try mixing a 1/4 cup yogurt with 2 pinches of ginger & cumin powder in 1 cup of water. I remember while in India, I used to drink lassis and fresh coconut water every day, so refreshing in hot weather.
This time I came up with a different one, using mango and saffron. This golden yellow spice comes from the stigma of a particular crocus. The best quality is grown in Spain and in Kashmir and must be picked by hand. It's unique flavour and colour is highly prized. Some of its many uses are as a blood cleanser, liver detoxifier, nerve tonic, blood thinner and as a heart tonic. It's aphrodisiac and can help increase the sperm count. It can also be used for cough, cold and congestion and haemorrhoids.



Sweet saffron and mango lassi
Serves 2 big glasses of 3 smaller ones

250g plain yogurt
250ml water
1/2 mango, diced
3 pinches of saffron powder
2 tbps honey
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp ground cardamon
pinch of salt
4 ice cubes

Directions:
Combine all the ingredients in a bender. Pulse until smooth and frothy. Serve immediately.




Note: In this recipe I used the same amount of yogurt than water. If you like it thicker just reduce the amount of water.  You can substitute the mango for any other fruit, and if you like it sweeter just add more honey.


Hope you have a wonderful weekend.  Lets hope this beautiful weather last another couple of weeks.
Cheers!



Thursday, 26 September 2013

HELBEH, FENUGREEK CAKE

6 comments:

Six or seven years ago I discovered, by chance, what later became my favorite cookbook ever and a big source of inspiration: Ottolenghi. It was because of this book that I learnt to know a whole different style of cooking, so new to me and yet so familiar. Their creators:  Yotam Ottolenghi and  Sami Tamimi are both original from Jerusalem and their cuisine is strongly Middle Eastern style with a mix of Mediterranean. Not long after I got the book, and having done every single recipe of it,  (all of them wonderful and mouthwatering) I moved to London. During those years, I visited ALL of their Ottolenghi cafe's quite often, even their restaurant Nopi. They never ceased to amaze me. Every time I went in I just couldnt help myself.  Every lunch was perfect, every pastry was oh so good, and the whole ambiance so inspiring. I must admit that my last years of cuisine have been deeply influenced by them and for that I am very grateful. Ok, I think Im blushing now!
Later on, Yotam Ottolenghi released a vegetarian book called Plenty, fabulous too. And last year, while in London, on the day of the release, my husband gave me as a surprise their latest book:  Jerusalem. 
Middle Eastern 100%, yeah! Going through the pages you can feel the flavors and smell the  vibrant city of Jerusalem, fresh pittas, herbs, black figs, chopped cucumbers, sheep roaming the hills, syrupy cakes,mmm. 


Today I will share the recipe of a fenugreek cake called Helbeh. Fenugreek, an aromatic bittersweet spice, has quite a strong flavor. It's a small seed, that is actually a legume that grows in India and in some places of the  mediterranean. Mostly dry roasted and used in currys, dals and pickles. This little seed contains proteins, fibre and Vitamin C, niacin, potassium, iron and alkaloids. Among some of their benefits are : it increases milk production among nursing mothers, helps reduce symptoms of PMS, reduce cholesterol, increases the libido,  reduces heartburn, you can loose weight by reducing the appetite,  and cure skin inflammations. Wow!
Fenugreek has a strong savory association, reminding as of curries, etc; but I invite you to give it a try as this cake is absolutely amazing and full of exoticism.
I've adapted the recipe from Jerusalem, just slightly. Always make helbeh at least a day before you want to serve it, as the flavors need time to come together.

HELBEH (FENUGREEK CAKE)
Serves 10/12

Ingredients:
500g fine semolina
75g whole wheat flour
70g pine nuts, blitzed into large crumbs
80ml olive oil
80ml sunflower oil
40g melted ghee
1 1/2 tsp fenugreek seeds
1 1/2 tsp fast action dried yeast
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
25g  whole almonds, blanched and peeled

Syrup:
300g cane sugar
100ml water
2 tbps lemon juice
1 1/ tbsp orange blossom water

Directions:
Mix the semolina, flour and pine nuts in a large bowl. Add the oils and the melted ghee and mix well. Set aside.
Put the fenugreek seeds and 500 ml of water in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil, then simmer on a low heat for about 25 minutes. Drain the seeds, reserving the cooking water, and add them to the semolina mix. Add the yeast, baking poweder and salt, then gradually stir in 180ml of the hot fenugreek water; if you dont have enough liquid make it up with water. Knead the dough on a clean surface until is completely smooth.


Grease a 24 cm round cake tin with butter and line it with baking paper so that the paper comes three quarters up the sides of the tin. Pour in the semolina mixture and press it down with your hand si its levelled and smooth. Use a sharp knife to score the surface of the cake with parallel lines 5 cm apart, followed by another set of lines at a 45-degree angle, creating a diamond pattern. Place one almond in the center of each diamond. Cover the cake tin with a towel and set aside somewhere warm for about 1 hour. Towards the end of the resting time, preheat oven to 220* C degrees, allowing plenty of time for your oven to heat fully.

Put the cake on the lower shelf of the oven and bake for 20 minutes. Reduce heat to 200*C degrees and bake for further 20 minutes or until golden brown.
Prepare the syrup while the cake is in the oven. Place sugar and water in a small saucepan and mix well. Heat up and once it boils add the lemon juice and simmer for 4 more minutes. Take the syrup off the heat, allow it to cool down just a little and then add the orange blossom water.
Once the cake is cooked, remove it from the oven and immediately drizzle the syrup all over it. Let the cake cool completely before covering it well with foil. Serve the next day.


Hope you have a wonderful weekend. See you next time,
Cheers!

Thursday, 19 September 2013

FIG JAM WITH LEMONS

2 comments:

As a kid I remember when my father used to buy figs for a special occasion, both my mom and him would go crazy about them. I couldn't understand why, the texture, the flavor, it just wasn't right for me. After many moons, I moved to Ibiza and I discovered the fig trees and our love affair begun: Clara & Mr. Fig, yes! Over there, the fig trees grow wild, everywhere you go you'll find one, standing next to a carob and an almond tree. My favorite part of the day was to go for a walk in the afternoons with an empty basket and fill up with fresh figs directly from the trees and enjoy the refreshing air of the countryside. Oh Ibiza! It has something special, Im sure whoever has been there knows what Im talking about, its somehow magical and mysterious.


Going back to figs, I discovered that not only there where black figs but green figs, and what a discovery!  I liked them so much more. I don't live in Ibiza anymore but Im still in Spain, and very close to where I live its full of figs, carob, pomegranates, grapes, avocados, lemons, oranges, etc, can't complaint right? So a couple of days ago we went for a nice walk and picked up like 3 kg of figs! And when I came back  I remembered that the last time I went back home, a good friend of mine gave me, as a gift, a jar of fig jam. It was absolutely delicious so I decided to give it a try. Thank you May!
This recipe though, calls for much less sugar than traditional recipes. I used jaggery instead of white sugar and reduced its amount for less than half of it. The result was amazing but mind you that because the sugar acts as a preservative it will not last as long. So I just keep my jars in the fridge.
You can reduce the recipe by half easily.
I highly recommend you make this, It's perfect to welcome the autumn and enjoy it with  a good slice of toasted bread  and a cup of tea.



FIG JAM WITH LEMONS

Ingredients:
2 kg. fresh figs
500 grs. jaggery
2 lemons, zest and juice
pinch of salt

Directions:

Remove hard stems from figs, wipe the dirt off and chop them into small pieces leaving the skins on.
Put the jaggery and 1/2 cup of filtered water into a heavy pot. Cook on a medium heat until the jaggery is dissolved. Add the chopped figs with the lemon zest and lemon juice. Simmer until the jam is thickened and the pieces are broken down ( it will depend on the water content of the fruit).  I cooked mine for 2 hours, mixing every 10 minutes. When ready, I decided to liquidize it as I like jams quite thin, but its totally up to you.
Pour jam into sterilized jars and keep refrigerated.


Chopped figs



After 15 minutes

After 1 hour

Ready!

I will embrace the arrival of the autumn and have a nice mate with a piece of toast and fig jam. Hope you have a wonderful weekend.
See you next week!