Showing posts with label soy sausage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soy sausage. Show all posts

Saturday, October 24, 2009

The best dollar-fifty I ever spent: A pint of tomatillos

Imagine the taste of a raw green pepper mixed with a strawberry. That's how a raw tomatillo tastes.

I removed the skins of these three (save the skins for your soup stock), cut them in quarters and threw them into the skillet for the last two minutes to heat with my curried blue and white potatoes. Start by cooking the potatoes thoroughly with olive oil, onion, and salt. At the end, add the curry powder (don't be shy about it), and I added a little rosemary as well.

Then add the tomatillos. They taste so good raw, it nearly breaks your heart to cook them, so only add them at the end, give them a little heat and toss them around to coat them with the other flavors, but they've got plenty of flavor inside, so don't lose that.

We're going to have these with a breakfast sandwich. Most of the time, we don't have things like soy sausage (or any fake "meats") or tofu in the house. We do eat tofu hoagies from Fu-Wah probably at least once a week, but as a general rule, the kitchen is stocked with vegetables, grains, beans, and fruit, not manufactured nonsense. However. I've been craving these soy sausage on English muffin sandwiches like crazy lately.

We bought fennel seeds at the market today, so I embedded some of those into the Gimme Lean soy sausage patty. I also cooked some thin, thin slivers of portabella mushroom. This is all cooked in the olive oil with the leftover tastes from the curry potatoes and tomatillos.

We're going to slice a tomato to top this with and put it on a toasted white-wheat English muffin. As these are cooking, you've got the potatoes setting aside. When you take the soy sausage and mushrooms off the heat, throw the potatoes back on for a minute or two to reheat while you put the sandwich together.


I have to be someplace tomorrow at 9 am and I have to be there all day. So I'm going to bring some raw tomatillos for snacks (remember, they're high in Omega 3 and 6 fatty acids, so they're nice and filling), along with some raw carrots, maroon, orange, and white.

Right now, I've got a butternut squash and three apples baking in the oven with olive oil, cinnamon, and brown sugar. They're not for tonight. I'm going to make fried apples pies in the morning to take with me, and wrap the squash (stuffed with apple) in foil and bring that as well. I'm moving up in the world, I now have big, re-usable aluminum pans to bake in, rather than folded aluminum foil. One day, I'll own a casserole dish. I will.

Saturday market: tomatillos, spices, red beans, and mud

It's like summer outside. Another rainy day at the farmer's market, but instead of last weekend's Nor'easter, today we have 70 degree weather, low clouds, and balmy air.

Last night, I decided to buy something today that I've never bought before, but I didn't know what. At the market, I decided to buy tomatillos. I used to order something at a Mexican restaurant that had tomatillo sauce. Where was that? I remember, it was the place at 40th and Sansom, where I used to eat when I worked at the salon. I would get the black bean burrito with tomatillo sauce. It seemed hot and cool at the same time. Like if you had a spicy cucumber. I hadn't even gone vegan yet then, but I always ordered vegan things from there. I was such a closet case. It's always so obvious in hindsight.

Saturday shopping list

1 lb small red beans (dry)
3 leeks
1 pint tomatillos
2 portabella caps
1/2 dozen tomatoes
2 butternut squash
2 large yellow onions
1 bunch curly kale
big bag of multi-color carrots
1 oz curry powder
1 oz fennel seeds
1 oz southern seasoning mix
1 oz lemon pepper
1 loaf multi-grain bread
1 loaf sourdough bread
1/2 dozen brownies

total at farmer's market: $52.21

We did great on money at the market today, especially considering that we bought all those spices and a half-dozen brownies, and it still was under $55. However, to the total grocery bill, we have to add about another $10. We had to go downtown for cat food and a vacuum cleaner anyway (apparently, they don't sell vacuum cleaners for under $80 anywhere in West Philly), so we used the opportunity to go to Trader Joe's.

@ TJ's

two 14-oz packages of Gimme Lean soy sausage
1 lb of firm tofu
1 dozen English muffins

total: I didn't save the receipt, but $10 and change

So, about $60, and we are stocked with what I feel is deluxe food. I feel completely spoiled right now. Mark is frying up a couple of soy sausage patties while I blog this up. Nothing like breakfast for dinner. When he's done, I'm going to make a side of curried potatoes before I fix a soy sausage sandwich for myself.

Featured on today's shopping list: Tomatillos. Tomatillos are a good source of Omega 3 and Omega 6 fatty acids. Those are good for anybody, but they're really great things for vegans, and especially vegans with a high metabolism, because fatty acids burn slow on your metabolism fire. (Remember, carbs are like paper on the fire, and fats are like logs on the fire.)


Saturday, October 3, 2009

Celebration Weekend Continues: Puff Pastries



That went better than expected.

Remember the puff pastry sheets we bought at Fu-Wah for $1.39? Those are going to go a long way. I can't wait to put more things in them and crisp them up.

Here's what I did with them tonight.

Remember the Gimme Lean soy sausage I bought at Trader Joe's the other day? It was for this purpose. I fried up the soy sausage in olive oil with onion and portabella mushrooms, and the sweet little fennel seeds.

After sprinkling some flour on a plate, I laid out the puff pastry sheets and filled them with the mixture. Notice how thin each sheet is, compared to the whole block of pastry sheets. There are a ton of these things. $1.39 is going to go a long way, and that's how you afford things like brownies and really good olive oil and fresh-baked bread.

















Heat about a quarter inch of olive oil over a high gas flame, if you have one (high electric heat, I suppose, if you don't.) Or a campfire!

Drizzle all around the edges of the pastry sheets with olive oil, fold the sheet over into a triangle and press the oil-coated edges of the sheets together.

Sizzle in the oil for about 5 seconds per side.



The batch of filling shown above filled five pastry sheets. Arrange them on a plate and mix up a dipping sauce of olive oil, balsamic vinegar, and ground rosemary.


These were delicious. We won't always have soy sausage, but you can also stuff them with yellow squash or patty pan squash, which cost about $1 a lb. and are pretty light on the scale.

Squash would be good with fennel, mushroom, onion, you could throw in some beans if you wanted it to be heartier.

You could do corn and tomatoes and dip it in black bean dip.

We have that quinoa.

I'm having racing thoughts about potatoes and the blender.

And then sweets. I have apples and peaches. You could also do pear. Berries. Oh my god. But nobody's had any berries for a long time, I guess they're out of season. Peaches, apples, pears are here now.

Oh, puff pastries for $1.39 from Fu-Wah. This is a good investment.