Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Orange Pan-Glazed Tempah







Last week my friend Catie came over to help me with mundane wedding project tasks, God bless her. While cutting burlap and twisting birdseed into tulle wrappers, we started talking about food. She has been trying to avoid overly processed foods too. We started swapping what ingredients we had been experimenting with. I mentioned that the dinner I had prepared I had made a few days earlier, but with tofu and that it was surprisingly better than that night's chicken version.  I also passed on a tip I had learned from a food blog, but had yet to try- freezing tofu before preparing it as that will give it a more meaty texture. My friend stated that she hadn't cooked with tofu much but rather had some success with tempeh."Tempeh!! Oh tell me more!" 

Tempeh was an ingredient I had only heard of and didn't know anything about. My pal explained that Tempeh appealed to her because it was less processed than tofu. Holy crap. Even tofu is 'processed'. I hadn't even thought of that. I figured if it was in the hippie section of the grocery it was not processed. And really, it's not that tofu is all that processed, just more so than tempeh. If my understanding is correct (feel free to correct me in the comments section), tofu is made from soy milk, whereas tempeh skips that step of making soy milk and is pretty much straight up fermented soy beans. Once I got my mitts on some at the local natural foods grocery I discovered that indeed, it is pretty unprocessed. check it. Yes, those grey and black spots are fine and don't indicate any spoilage.  






I found a recipe online and decided I would pair it with some red peppers I had on hand and some quinoa although the inspiration recipe paired it with wheat berries- another ingredient I need to try! (Can I add that to my wedding registry?) The recipe isn't a marinade as I expected, but rather a glaze. The flavors are kind of a mild version of that Chinese dish, orange chicken, which I loooovvveee but haven't had in a long time because it's so processed and sugary. But I wanted to run with that, so I tweaked the recipe to make the flavors a bit stronger. I also sprinkled on some chopped up peanuts for texture and cilantro and red onion for color and to give a stronger flavor. 


    




ginger and mircograter


Orange Pan-Glazed Tempeh

Serve with your choice of veggies and/or whole grain. Slightly adapted from 101 cookbooks. 


1 cup OJ. If you squeeze your own takes about 3-4 large oranges.
1 tablespoon freshly grated ginger

2 teaspoons tamari or soy sauce

1 1/2 tablespoons dry white wine. The original recipe calls for mirin, but I didn't want to buy a jar of something I may never use again.
2 teaspoons molasses (or maple syrup)
1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
2 small garlic cloves
some olive oil
a lime or lemon if you've got it. I cheated and used some of that stuff in the bottle- don't you judge me.
a handful of fresh cilantro (optional)
package of tempeh. The original recipe remarks you can also use extra-firm tofu, though I haven't tried it. 

Juice your oranges into a small bowl and remove any seeds. I won't tell if you use reg. OJ. 
Grate your ginger into bowl and add the soy sauce (or tamari), white wine (or mirin), and your sweetener of choice (maple syrup or molasses). Set aside. You are not marinating anything. 


Cut up your tempeh. I cut mine into small triangles. Fry it in large pan with olive oil for about 5 minutes on each side. 


Pour your OJ mix into the pan and simmer for about 10 minutes until sauce reduces to a glaze. (I added red peppers to mine at this point and threw in some red onion slivers in the last minute of cooking. You don't want to really cook red onions or they loose that beautiful color.)You can squeeze some lime on top, sprinkle on some cilantro and peanuts on top for a real ta-da and to make it a little more Thai-like. 


Serves 4, or two with one small leftover side dish for lunch if you have a boy to feed.



Monday, April 1, 2013

Whole Wheat Waffles


When the future hub's roomate recently moved out and I started moving in, there were items left behind. Some of the items were abandoned by roomates of long ago. So when a waffle iron, among other things was found, picture texts were exchanged with a "is this yours?" to the last rommie.  

Joyfully, the waffle iron was one of these items abandoned. Now that I've taken a whack at this dish, I can invite said last inhabitant and let him enjoy the fruits of the newly rediscoved waffle iron too.


I modified this king arthur recipe a good bit as the batter was intially too wet and the waffles too thin. I added wheat germ to the mix which gives it the added benefit of a kick-butt protein. Unfortunately, wheat germ is removed during the refining of whole wheat grains to white flour because otherwise the flour would go rancid quickly. But you can keep wheat germ in your fridge and add it to things like your yogurt, cereal, and waffles. However, I must warn you, perhaps I should have called these "Fart Waffles." Wheat germ definitely gives you gas.

I also substituted molassas for the refined sugar. The fresh orange juice was part of the original recipe and really played off the other ingredients nicely.






Whole Wheat Waffles

1 1/2 cups whole wheat flour *
1/2 cup wheat germ
2 teaspoons aluminum-free baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons molasses **
1/3 cup unsalted butter, gently melted
(That's nearly 5 tablespoons if you're like me and just use the little tablespoon ruler on the butter wrapper)
1 1/2 cups lukewarm milk
1 large egg
2 tablespoons orange juice
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
notes:
*I used whole wheat pastry flour, but I'm sure you could get away with regular, and certainly white whole wheat flour as that's what the original recipe called for.
** or honey, or maple syrup, but molasses gives the most complex flavor.

  1. all the dry ingredients in a bowl.
  2. melt yo butter. Add in milk and continue to cook for another minute.  (here's a little tip: when you microwave butter, put another cup of water in the microwave with it and it will allow you butter to melt more slowly and avoid splattering.)
  3. Whisk in egg, orange juice, and vanilla extract until combined.
  4. Add wet ingredients to dry ingredients and stir until just combined. Don't get too over zealous. Some lumps are okay, don't over mix.
  5. Heat up yo waffle iron. Preheat da oven to 200 degrees.
  6. Let your batter sit for at least 5 minutes to firm up a bit.
  7. Add batter to heated waffle iron. (give your iron time to heat up inbetween rounds.) Remove cooked waffle and place on a baking sheet in the oven. I read that stacking causes waffles to become limp due to the steam so I'll do that next time.)
  8. Top with berries if you've got it and 100% pure maple syrup. (Or whatever you damn well feel like.)
  9. Save leftovers in the fridge and reheat in the toaster.