Showing posts with label almonds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label almonds. Show all posts
Sunday, 27 February 2011
"Eggplant" Rollatini with Spinach and Tofu Ricotta
This recipe is a variation of one from the justly-famous Veganomicon, which we got for Christmas. (We spent Christmas in Switzerland, and my brother insisted that we carry this heavy book all the way there and back so we could open it on Christmas Day. My belly thanks you, Ed, but my back does not!)
We've been very slowly working through the recipes ever since. This one was quite complex to make, involving marinara sauce, breading mixture, tofu ricotta and a final assembly stage, but cooking together is a nice way of spending a winter's evening.
First, three aubergines were sliced lengthwise at a thickness of about 3 mm. I found the easiest way to do this was to cut them in half, lay one half on a board flat side down, and run a knife along to cut a slice off the bottom. If you press the handle of the knife onto the board and keep it that way as you move it, the blade will be held level at the right height. The slices of aubergine will look far too thick and stiff to roll up. Salt, drain and rinse them, however, and they lose a lot of water and become floppy. I'd never done this because it seemed an overcomplicated and 1970s technique, but I see now that it can have uses.
While one of you is developing aubergine science, the other can make up some tofu ricotta (recipe here) and almesan (a Parmesan substitute made with almonds -- recipe here). Get some marinara sauce on the go as well: it gets better the longer you leave it to cook.
Flour the slices and shallow-fry them to become golden brown. (The book advises coating them in a breadcrumb-and-herb mixture with almesan but we couldn't get it to stay on. Just add extra herbs somewhere else if you want them!)
To make the rollatinis, roll each aubergine slice around a spinach leaf and two tablespoons of ricotta. You can add toasted pine nuts too. Pour half your sauce into the bottom of a deep oven tray, arrange your rollatini on it, sprinkle on almesan and pour over the rest of the sauce.
Bake them for about twenty minutes at 180 °C and serve with more almesan sprinkled over the top. The book suggests serving with steamed broccoli or spaghetti ... but by the time we'd finished making the rollatini, we weren't hungry enough for either of those!
This was delicious and I can't wait to make it for guests. David thought the tofu ricotta was nicer than the real stuff, while I could happily eat almesan on its own with a spoon. We both agreed that having more sauce would have been better as it cooks down quite a lot.
Monday, 25 October 2010
International Almond Cupcakes of Mystery
Adapted from Peanut Butter Cupcakes in Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World by Isa Chandra Moskowitz and Terry Hope Romero.
My friend Martin gave me this amazing book for Christmas and Dave and I have been slowly working our way through it since. I made the Gingerbread Cupcakes at the weekend -- they were delicious -- and wanted to repeat them tonight. Unfortunately, once I'd sieved the flour into the bowl I realised we were missing some key ingredients. I flicked through to find something I could bake instead. The substitutions I had to make gave a certain international aspect to the recipe!
Ingredients
3/4 cup soya milk
2 tsp sushi vinegar
1/2 cup whole nut almond butter
1/3 cup vegan margarine
2/3 cup granulated sugar
2 tbsp maple syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 1/3 plain wholemeal flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 salt
1. Preheat oven to 180 °C and line a 12-cup muffin tray with paper liners.
2. Add sushi vinegar to soya milk and put to one side to curdle. (Finally, a recipe where you're meant to curdle the soya milk!)
3. Mix the almond butter, margarine, sugar, maple syrup and vanilla together in your main mixing bowl. Add the soya milk and vinegar and mix them in well.
4. Sieve the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt into a smaller bowl. Add the dry ingredients to the main bowl and mix.
5. Fill the cupcake liners equally and bake for 20-25 minutes (ours were done after 20 minutes). They're ready when you can poke a skewer into the middle and it comes out clean.
Dave made a chocolate "buttercream" icing to put on top from margarine, lots of cocoa, some icing sugar and a little soya milk.
The cupcakes were tasty and very satisfying. The recipe called for plain white flour and next time I would use that instead of the wholemeal, but it didn't really matter because the almond butter had a strong enough flavour to stand up against it.
These were so good, I may never make the peanut butter recipe in the book -- unless I run out of almond butter, of course.
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