Coming Soon!

Posted in coming soon! with tags , , , , , , , , , on July 19, 2008 by Layli

Here are some recipes I plan to post soon, so come back and check out the site regularly for new updates, including these tasty treats:

carrot souffle (no, really, it’s great)

mom’s oatmeal cookies

stuffed eggplant

quiche from scratch (it’s not that hard, i swear)

sweet sauteed zuccini

more recipes and categories to come…. Peace.

mojito salmon

Posted in entrees with tags , , , , , , on July 19, 2008 by Layli

Mojitos? Good! Salmon? Good! Mojito Salmon? Why not?

I had mint, lime and a craving for fish. What was a girl to do?

I got some beautiful salmon steaks from a fish monger in Kensington Market in Toronto and put together a nice little meal for myself and a very good friend who has endured one too many meatless meals on my account.

I sqeezed the juice from a lime into the bottom of a cassarole dish and added olive oil. It’s important to add oil to the pan when cooking salmon because it like to stick itself steadfastly to the pan when given a chance.

I added mint from my mint plant (preferably peppermint or spearmint). just a few leaves at the bottom of the dish, keeping a few aside for on top of the fish.

Let the juices sit for a bit to mingle and, you know, get to know one another. I like to, when I add the salmon, first put the steak into face down, then flip, so the skin is on the bottom but the juices have coated the top. I add a few mint leaves and slices of lime to the top of the salmon steak and bake on about 375 to 400 F for about 30 minutes. The salmon should flake apart when touched with a fork and should be a little browned at the edges. For the love of your own digestive tract, do not eat undercooked fish outside of a sushi bar with a good reputation!

Serve fish with potatoes (my favorite) or rice (also my favorite) and veggies, just like mom used to make! YUM!

portobello caps stuffed w/ bleu cheese

Posted in entrees with tags , , , , , , , , on July 19, 2008 by Layli

Okay, this one I discovered in Toronto when I, once again got suckered into cooking for some friends. (Their theory as to why i should do the cooking is because I am the one with dietary restriction and they don’t know how to cook good meals without meat.)

I was getting ready to prepare the usual, easy, Italian-summer fare, with portobello mushrooms, spinach, tomatoes, mozzarella cheese and olive oil in some combination, when my friend suggested stuffing the caps with blue cheese. A light went on. I said get the spinach, a bell pepper, an onion, the caps and the cheese. See you at my place at 18.00. Synchronize watches!

Ingredients:

Portobello mushroom caps (large), approx. one per person.

1/2 pound savory blue cheese

2-3 apples (I like McIntosh, but any tart apple should do), cut into bit-sized pieces

Big bag o’ spinach

short grain, brown rice

1 bell pepper

1 sweet onion

olive oil

balsamic vinegar

fresh sweet basil

You will also need:

a casserole dish, large enough to fit your caps whole plus deep enough for a bed of spinach.

First, mix olive oil and vinegar into the bottom of the casserole dish, along with basil.

Then, lay a bed of spinach, about 1/2 inch thick in the dish. Add apples. Add another layer of spinach and a layer of apples until the layers are almost at the top of the dish.

Place caps up-side-down on the spinach and apples. Fill caps with blue cheese.

Bake in oven on about 350 F until cheese is slightly brown and crispy on top, approx. 20-30 min.

While caps are cooking, cut and saute pepper and onion with a little olive oil.

Cook brown rice (usually at a 2:1 water:rice ratio, but check packaging since brown rice can need more water sometimes).

When rice is finished and veggies are sauteed (remember, this means still a little crunchy), mix together.

When caps are finished take out of oven and let cool for a minute or two. The spinach will have absorbed the oil and vinegar, plus the mushroom juices and will look a little brown and gross. Don’t worry, it’ll still taste great!

I like to serve this as so, with a bed of rice in the center of the plate and the cap on top in the center, being sure to spoon some of the juices from the bottom of the dish over the plate before serving. The juices with be sweet and really compliment the savory cheese and vinegar.

This recipe is dedicated to Hilary (for trying it first and inspiring Kevin to tell me about it), and Kevin (who bled for this meal, and let me run in a new direction with his suggestion).

Hello world!

Posted in Uncategorized on July 19, 2008 by Layli

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