Recipes

Orzo with Everything

Orzo with Everything

Orzo with Everything

A big thank you to Sarah for sharing this with us.  We made this for a potluck and it went over really well.  We have made it several times since then, since we all love orzo so much.

Ingredients

1 1/2 cups orzo
1/3 cup sun-dried tomatoes in oil- chopped
5 Tbsp olive oil
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar (maybe a bit more to taste)
1/4 cup kalamata olives- chopped

The rest.
1 cup radicchio- finely chopped
1/2 cup pine nuts- toasted on stovetop over medium heat, stirring constantly
1/2 cup fresh basil- chopped
2 cloves minced garlic
salt and pepper to taste
lightly garnish with grated parmesan

Method

Cook and drain orzo and put in a large bowl.  Add tomatoes, olive oil, balsamic vinegar and olives.  Toss and let stand till cool.

When cool, add the rest.

Notes

We have also tried things like dried cranberries, feta, etc. for variety.

Black Bean Mole Burgers

Black Bean Mole Burger

Black Bean Mole Burger

Black Bean Veggie Burgers + Mole

There are a lot of black bean burgers that seem like they are pretending to be meat and ends up not having many veggies and an overly homogeneous texture. I prefer burgers that are chock-a-block full of veggies.  That is the first goal of this burger.

I love Mexican mole.  Love it. I first had it in high school at La Cucaracha in St. Paul and was utterly amazed at the savory chocolate taste.  I was impressed and forever changed.  I have tried to analyze the mole at dozens of restaurants since then, and the ones that I like the most tend to have a spicy and smooth traditional chocolaty taste.  There are lots of different black bean mole recipes that got me thinking about combining mole into a black bean burger.  As far as I know, there is no other recipe like this out there.  This black bean mole burger recipe is the best of what I love about black bean veggie burgers and mole- I hope you try it!

Black Bean Mole Burgers

Recipe by Bunnies Love Carrots

Ingredients

1 dry end slice of wheat bread (or 1/4 cup plain dry wheat bread crumbs)
1 1/2 cups cooked black beans (or 1 15 ounces can rinsed and drained)
1/4 cup lentils (washed, cooked and pureed)*
1 cup cooked brown rice*
2 tablespoons cocoa powder
2 teaspoons chili powder
1 teaspoon chipotle powder
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon (use bold cassia cinnamon, or 1/2 tsp mild ceylon cinnamon)
1 teaspoon dried epazote**
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1 tablespoon agave nectar (or honey)
1 small lime- juiced (about 2 1/2 tablespoons lime juice)
1 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper

For toasting:
2 teaspoon ground cumin
1 1/2 teaspoons dried oregano
2 tablespoons sesame seeds

1 small yellow onion- chopped
1 clove garlic- minced
1 roasted red pepper- chopped
1 portobello mushroom- finely chopped
1/2 cup carrots- finely chopped
1/4 cup corn- frozen

Spray olive oil or nonstick cooking spray
6 whole wheat hamburger buns, thin buns, or corn/flour tortillas- whatever your preference
avocado slices (optional)
salsa (optional)

Method

Roast the red pepper.  I typically do this right on the gas burner or under the broiler with a drop of olive oil rubbed over the skin.  Roast until the skin is charred black all over, then put it directly in small paper bag or a bowl covered with plastic wrap to steam while you chop veggies.  This whole pepper roasting process takes about 15 minutes.

In a medium mixing bowl, gently crush the black beans with a fork just until there are no whole beans left.  Add the lentils* and rice*.
Add the spices (save the cumin, oregano, and sesame seeds).  Lightly fold the ingredients.

Prepping the beans and flavoring the base ingredients

Prepping the beans and flavoring the base ingredients

Chop the bread finely and transfer to the top of the ingredients, but don’t mix.

Chop the onion into small pieces and mince the garlic.  Prep the mushroom by removing and discarding the brown gills and stem.  Chop the cap into small pieces.  Chop the carrots- we typically have julienne carrots that I chop into a fine dice- or you can shred them.  Measure the corn so that all these last ingredients are all ready.  Save the red pepper until the last minute so that it has the additional time to steam.

In a well-seasoned medium-sized cast-iron skillet on medium-low, toast the cumin, oregano and sesame seeds, stir constantly for 2 minutes until the cumin is fragrant and the sesame seeds are lightly toasted.  Transfer to the mixing bowl and sprinkle over the top of the bread.

In the same skillet add a tiny bit of olive oil, cook the onion for 2 minutes until they barely start to turn transparent then add the garlic for 1 minute.

Cooking the onion, garlic, pepper and mushroom.

Cooking the onion, garlic, pepper and mushroom.

While this cooks, prep the red pepper by pulling out the center with all the seeds and discard. Scrape off and discard all (or most of) the charred black skin.  Chop the red flesh and add to pan along with the mushrooms. Cook for 2 minutes to remove a little of the moisture. Add the carrots and corn for one last minute and then shut of flame.

All the veggies makes a colorful burger.

All the veggies makes a colorful burger.

Add the vegetables to the mixing bowl and fold together being careful not to completely demolish the black beans.

Chill the mixture for at least 20 minutes. (I typically use this time to make some margaritas and guacamole… instant fiesta!)  The longer you can chill the mixture the better, so this is an easy meal to prep ahead.

The final product, ready to chill in the refrigerator.

The final product, ready to chill in the refrigerator.

Shape the chilled mixture into 6 patties about 3/4 inch thick. Fry them in a cast-iron skillet with a little spray of olive oil, pressing down firmly as they fry for 5 minutes on each side.  Coat the skillet with olive oil when you turn them to ensure even browning.  When they are done they should feel fairly firm.  Top with avocado slices and your favorite salsa.  I like a chunky pineapple chipotle salsa- or anything spicy with some tropical fruit.

The final burger in all it's glory.

The final burger in all it's glory.

*Time saving tips

Lentils: I used my pre-cooked, pureed and frozen lentils that I keep on hand.  They are great to add to macaroni and cheese or anything that you want a creamier or cheesier consistency.  Lentils are a super food and you barely notice the taste as long as you don’t overdo it.
Brown Rice: I like to use the extra rice from takeout or typically make extra rice when we make rice- specifically for this type of purpose. The burgers really need the rice- preferably brown for the firmness, but any other firm rice would work.

Notes

These burgers have a little kick.  If you prefer it to be milder, you can cut back on the chili powder and chipotle powder.  When the kids are eating, I typically exclude these two ingredients until the very end- make a burger for each of the kids and then add the spice.  This makes the remaining burgers extra spicy!  Good stuff.  The kids like these with ketchup.  Gross… but whatever floats their boat.  This is what I did in the above photos, so the bean get a little more crushed with the extra mixing.  It isn’t the end of the world.

I find that lots of veggie burger recipes tend to have patties that fall apart. At a certain point, I don’t care.  Lots of recipes call for gluten flour or an egg as a binder.  Here I opted to use a smaller amount, but a little more substantial bread crumb which works really well as a binder without an egg or adding extra gluten flour. Refrigeration really helps these stay together nicely. If you are in a hurry, you can certainly fry them right away. I have had very consistent results of firm patties that stay together fairly nicely with this small about of gluten.  If you prefer gluten-free, you can exclude the bread.  In this case you really need more refrigeration so that the rice soaks up more moisture- though they will never stay together as nice without this binder. They are still tasty either way!

**Epazote is traditional Mexican spice that is a little hard to find.  Mexican grocery stores may have it fresh.  I used dried from Penzeys.  It is supposed to reduce intestinal gas with beans- and has a sweet and spicy flavor unlike anything.  If you don’t have it- just leave it out.  It is just as delicious without.

Lentil Black Bean Dip

Lentil Black Bean Dip

Lentil Black Bean Dip

We can’t love anything more. This is a huge favorite of ours. We like it best with Xochil chips.  They are thin and crispy, with no preservatives, no cholesterol, no trans fats, no gluten, and no gmo. Lightly salted with sea salt, these chips are our favorite.  The are thin (what makes them awesome) so there ends up being a lot of little pieces that we typically put a bowl with lentil dip on top and eat with a fork… it is just that good.

Lentil Black Bean Dip

Recipe by Bunnies Love Carrots

Ingredients

1 cup lentils
5-6 green onions -  finely chopped
5 roma tomatoes- finely diced
1  15oz can black beans- well rinsed
4 oz can diced green chiles- with liquid
cilantro – a handful, finely chopped
6 oz fat-free catalina dressing

Xochitl Chips

Xochitl Chips

tortilla chips- preferably Xochitl (bag shown at right)

Method

Take 1 cup uncooked lentils, rinse, cover with 4 cups cold water, bring to a boil, then cover, reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes, drain and rinse in cold water.  Add the other ingredients and done.

Notes

Roma tomatoes work best because they are more fleshy, less seeds, but this would probably be even more awesome (if that is possible) in the summer with some of the awesome tomatoes available.

As for the catalina dressing, we genuinely like the fat free better… add this to taste, but we typically do 3/4 of a small bottle- around 8 oz.  We typically use Kraft.  Adding the whole bottle of dressing might be tempting because it might seem a little dry at first.  Once the dip is able to sit for a bit it releases more moisture, so keep it slightly drier than you might expect.  Missing link: Catalina dressing is one of the only things that we buy that has high-fructose corn syrup.  It might be the only thing. Otherwise, it is just tomatoes and spices… who knew? The high fructose corn syrup explains a lot, since I have always thought of this dressing as way too sweet.  Does anyone know of another catalina dressing without high fructose corn syrup?

Apricot BBQ Tofu, Avocado Marinated Kale Salad and Southwestern Corn Pudding

bbqtofu_salad_cornpuddingThis was an excellent meal.  The Apricot BBQ Tofu is a repeat from Veganomicon.  Good stuff.  The southwestern corn pudding is the obvious standout in this meal.  It was from Veganomicon.  We love this recipe and we love this cookbook! We are also trying to get more kale recipies because how vitamin rich kale apparently is.  This salad was excellent.  We got the recipe from a friend’s friend.  Thanks for passing it along, Brenda!

Avocado Marinated Kale Salad

Ingredients

1 head kale, destemmed- we used dino
2 avocados (can use 2 Tbsp olive oil instead- we didn’t)
3 lemons (or lemon juice)
2 large tomatoes
handful of mung bean sprouts (I usually don’t use, mostly because I don’t have them on hand)
sea salt to taste
cayenne pepper to taste

Method

Wash kale very well.  Remove leaves for inner stem with you hands or knife.  Place into a large mixing bowl and with yourhands rip the kale into small bite size pieces.  Scoop out the avocado into the bowl.  Juice the lemons into the bowl.  Dice the tomatoes and add. Add the sea salt and cayenne and then dig your hands in an mush it all up until the kale softens.  Add the sprouts about half way through to get them incorporated, but not demolished.  This is good right away and also saves well.

Notes

Kale has the highest level of antioxidants of all the greens.  The kids will eat it as well.  They prefer dino kale- which we got for this salad at the farmer’s market.