Don't get me wrong - the Moussaka was delish (and RICH), but nerdy me had to do something weird with the last couple of servings.
Nova's Bakery, which is right around the block from us, does some really awesome frozen pizza dough. The stuff is super-light and stretches to such lengths it's crazy. As you knead it, it fills with air - bubbles just naturally form. Awesome. So I made some crusts (yep, two, since we ALSO had leftover Green Bean Casserole), dusting the pans with cornmeal first, and went to it. Because adding cheese to these super-butterfatty foods was the best idea evarrrr!
Doesn't it look like it wants to eat your face? Good god.
And then there was the GBC pie:
Which had to get dusted with just a FEW more fried onions. Nom.
Silly, unhealthy, yeah. But fun!
Monster Moussaka Pizza, from above:
Yeah, I totally ate that missing slice.
Showing posts with label thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thanksgiving. Show all posts
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Luxurious Mushroom-Seitan Moussaka
This is my nerdy holiday dish.
Nerdy, because it's complicated, and delicate.
Holiday, because it's impressive, very rich, and goes best with 30 degree weather.
It's a definite undertaking - you'll want to start a day ahead if you're following the recipe exactly. But the layers of soft, yummy seitan, mushrooms, tomatoes both fresh and dried, nutmeg and cinnamon, and let's not forget the towering layer of fluffy, decadent, rich bechamel, well, it's guaranteed food coma, but yum yum yummy. A dish to tell your vegetarian friends that you love and appreciate them. Or even argue that meatless food can be as deeply flavorful as meatfull.
Just make sure there's salad nearby. Or simple, blanched green beans.
Mushroom Seitan Moussaka
For the seitan:
2 cups vital wheat gluten
1/2 cup tapioca starch
1/2 garbanzo flour
1/2 cup nutritional yeast
1.5 tablespoons fennel seeds, whole
1 tablespoon smoked paprika
1 tablespoon roasted garlic powder
1 tablespoon parsley
1 tablespoon freshly fround black pepper
1 tablespoon smoked salt
You can add other herbs here, if you'd like: rubbed sage, thyme, ground rosemary. I just stuck with the above this time.
1/2 cup olive oil + dash truffle oil
6 tablespoons tamari
1 tablespoon molasses
1 tsp smoke flavoring
2/3 cup water
4-5 cups water (plus 6 tablespoons tamari) or veggie broth
4 bay leaves
10 cloves garlic
1 red onion, sliced
A medium-sized crock pot
Mix your dry ingredients well and make a well in the center. In another bowl, mix your wet ingredients. Using a fork or your fingers, mix continually while pouring the wet mix in, until the dough balls up. Knead in the bowl for a minute, until everything is well incorporated.
Layer the onion in the bottom of the pot and place the seitan on top. Pour broth around the roast and add garlic cloves and bay leaves. Cook on low for 4 hours.
Usually, I make the seitan the day before and let it sit in the warmish broth all night. Makes for soft, but firm.
For this next step, you'll need:
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
Canola oil, to fry
Using the chopping blade on your food processor, mince the seitan. Cut it into small, uniformly sized pieces first, then pule 4-5 times until the mixture has been broken down into mostly small, quarter-sized chunks. Do this in three batches to keep things uniform.
In a large bowl, mix the seitan with the flour until well-coated on all sides. Add a little more flour, if you need to.
Heat your canola oil in a heavy skillet over medium-high heat and add half of your seitan. Press down into the oil and let it cook for 2-3 minutes, until browning has occured. Flip the seitan carefully and press into the oil again, cook for another 2-3 minutes, then drain on paper towels. Repeat with other 1/2 batch.
For the rest of the filling, you'll need:
1 20oz can crushed tomatoes
1/2 cup sundried tomatoes in oil
5 cloves garlic, minced
1 small red onion, minced
1 handful white raisins, chopped fine
1 stalk celery, minced
1 tsp cloves, ground
Several grates fresh nutmeg
Several grates cinnamon
Red wine, 1/2 cup
Smoked salt, tsp (or to taste)
Dash sugar or molasses
2 medium yukon gold potatoes, sliced thin
2 pounds baby bella mushrooms, sliced thin
2 tablespoons butter
4 cloves garlic, minced
Heat the sundried tomatoes and their oil in a small saute pan or skillet. Add the onion, celery, and garlic, and cook 3-4 minutes, until the onion is translucent. Add the cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon, and cook until fragrant, 1 minute. Deglaze the pan with the red wine and simmer off the alcohol, about 2 minutes. Add the tomatoes, 1/2 their juice, the raisins, and 2/3 of the seitan. Mix well. Add sugar and simmer mixture about 10 minutes, until very thick.
In a separate pan or skillet, melt the butter. Add garlic and mushrooms and toss to coat. Cook over medium heat until the mushrooms have released their liquid and it has evaporated, about 18-20 minutes, stirring often.
For the bechamel topping, you'll need:
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons flour
2 cups whole milk, warmed
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp salt
1/2 cup gruyere cheese, finely grated
4 egg yolks
Grated parmesian or extra gruyere, to top
Melt the butter in a skillet or small saucepan. Add garlic and salt. Add flour and whisk until flour turns golden, about 3 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in warmed milk. Return pan to heat and whisk mixture until it thickens, 3-4 minutes. Add cheese and whisk until mixture is very smooth and cheese has totally melted. Remove sauce from heat and stir in yolks, breaking them up and mixing them in thoroughly as well. Set sauce aside, covered with plastic wrap to prevent a skin from forming.
Assemble and bake:
Preheat oven to 375f.
Butter a deep 8x8 baking dish. Layer potatoes on the bottom, followed by mushrooms, then seitan mixture, then bechamel. Cover and bake 30 minutes until bubbling: add remaining cheese and bake uncovered 20 minutes more, until top has browned a bit and bubbling has ceased.
Let rest 15 minutes before slicing and serving, otherwise it'll be mess.
Alternatives abound:
Sub sliced, salted eggplant, 3 large, roasted for 10 minutes in a 350f oven for the Seitan mixture.
Use double the mushrooms (4 pounds) and create the tomato sauce with them instead, adding diced carrot, celeriac, or fennel as well.
Use yogurt and egg yolks for the topping for a lighter version - but still top with the parmesan.
Pureed silken tofu, lemon juice, and nutritional yeast, mixed with a little egg replacer and corn starch, topped with breadcrumbs, is a suitable vegan topping. Bake the entire casserole uncovered for the full 50 minutes if you go this way :)
Nerdy, because it's complicated, and delicate.
Holiday, because it's impressive, very rich, and goes best with 30 degree weather.
It's a definite undertaking - you'll want to start a day ahead if you're following the recipe exactly. But the layers of soft, yummy seitan, mushrooms, tomatoes both fresh and dried, nutmeg and cinnamon, and let's not forget the towering layer of fluffy, decadent, rich bechamel, well, it's guaranteed food coma, but yum yum yummy. A dish to tell your vegetarian friends that you love and appreciate them. Or even argue that meatless food can be as deeply flavorful as meatfull.
Just make sure there's salad nearby. Or simple, blanched green beans.
Mushroom Seitan Moussaka
For the seitan:
2 cups vital wheat gluten
1/2 cup tapioca starch
1/2 garbanzo flour
1/2 cup nutritional yeast
1.5 tablespoons fennel seeds, whole
1 tablespoon smoked paprika
1 tablespoon roasted garlic powder
1 tablespoon parsley
1 tablespoon freshly fround black pepper
1 tablespoon smoked salt
You can add other herbs here, if you'd like: rubbed sage, thyme, ground rosemary. I just stuck with the above this time.
1/2 cup olive oil + dash truffle oil
6 tablespoons tamari
1 tablespoon molasses
1 tsp smoke flavoring
2/3 cup water
4-5 cups water (plus 6 tablespoons tamari) or veggie broth
4 bay leaves
10 cloves garlic
1 red onion, sliced
A medium-sized crock pot
Mix your dry ingredients well and make a well in the center. In another bowl, mix your wet ingredients. Using a fork or your fingers, mix continually while pouring the wet mix in, until the dough balls up. Knead in the bowl for a minute, until everything is well incorporated.
Layer the onion in the bottom of the pot and place the seitan on top. Pour broth around the roast and add garlic cloves and bay leaves. Cook on low for 4 hours.
Usually, I make the seitan the day before and let it sit in the warmish broth all night. Makes for soft, but firm.
For this next step, you'll need:
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
Canola oil, to fry
Using the chopping blade on your food processor, mince the seitan. Cut it into small, uniformly sized pieces first, then pule 4-5 times until the mixture has been broken down into mostly small, quarter-sized chunks. Do this in three batches to keep things uniform.
In a large bowl, mix the seitan with the flour until well-coated on all sides. Add a little more flour, if you need to.
Heat your canola oil in a heavy skillet over medium-high heat and add half of your seitan. Press down into the oil and let it cook for 2-3 minutes, until browning has occured. Flip the seitan carefully and press into the oil again, cook for another 2-3 minutes, then drain on paper towels. Repeat with other 1/2 batch.
For the rest of the filling, you'll need:
1 20oz can crushed tomatoes
1/2 cup sundried tomatoes in oil
5 cloves garlic, minced
1 small red onion, minced
1 handful white raisins, chopped fine
1 stalk celery, minced
1 tsp cloves, ground
Several grates fresh nutmeg
Several grates cinnamon
Red wine, 1/2 cup
Smoked salt, tsp (or to taste)
Dash sugar or molasses
2 medium yukon gold potatoes, sliced thin
2 pounds baby bella mushrooms, sliced thin
2 tablespoons butter
4 cloves garlic, minced
Heat the sundried tomatoes and their oil in a small saute pan or skillet. Add the onion, celery, and garlic, and cook 3-4 minutes, until the onion is translucent. Add the cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon, and cook until fragrant, 1 minute. Deglaze the pan with the red wine and simmer off the alcohol, about 2 minutes. Add the tomatoes, 1/2 their juice, the raisins, and 2/3 of the seitan. Mix well. Add sugar and simmer mixture about 10 minutes, until very thick.
In a separate pan or skillet, melt the butter. Add garlic and mushrooms and toss to coat. Cook over medium heat until the mushrooms have released their liquid and it has evaporated, about 18-20 minutes, stirring often.
For the bechamel topping, you'll need:
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons flour
2 cups whole milk, warmed
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp salt
1/2 cup gruyere cheese, finely grated
4 egg yolks
Grated parmesian or extra gruyere, to top
Melt the butter in a skillet or small saucepan. Add garlic and salt. Add flour and whisk until flour turns golden, about 3 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in warmed milk. Return pan to heat and whisk mixture until it thickens, 3-4 minutes. Add cheese and whisk until mixture is very smooth and cheese has totally melted. Remove sauce from heat and stir in yolks, breaking them up and mixing them in thoroughly as well. Set sauce aside, covered with plastic wrap to prevent a skin from forming.
Assemble and bake:
Preheat oven to 375f.
Butter a deep 8x8 baking dish. Layer potatoes on the bottom, followed by mushrooms, then seitan mixture, then bechamel. Cover and bake 30 minutes until bubbling: add remaining cheese and bake uncovered 20 minutes more, until top has browned a bit and bubbling has ceased.
Let rest 15 minutes before slicing and serving, otherwise it'll be mess.
Alternatives abound:
Sub sliced, salted eggplant, 3 large, roasted for 10 minutes in a 350f oven for the Seitan mixture.
Use double the mushrooms (4 pounds) and create the tomato sauce with them instead, adding diced carrot, celeriac, or fennel as well.
Use yogurt and egg yolks for the topping for a lighter version - but still top with the parmesan.
Pureed silken tofu, lemon juice, and nutritional yeast, mixed with a little egg replacer and corn starch, topped with breadcrumbs, is a suitable vegan topping. Bake the entire casserole uncovered for the full 50 minutes if you go this way :)
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Crock Pot Setian and Veggies
Not the biggest fan of faux meat, here. Fake bacon, all that Quorn stuff, sometimes it puts me off. That's not to say I don't find crumbled Fakon an awesome taste atop roasted corn chowder - just that if you're trying to stay away from processed foods, fake meat is about as Outta a Tube as you can get, so I try to stick with Au Natural proteins, both for my clients and for our little fam.
But when you're going to a foodie pre-Thanksgiving bash, and there's nothing but Meaters as far as the eye can see, well, a compromise isn't out of the question. Enter pot roast. Of Seitan.
The base of this dish isn't much different than my sausage recipe - flavors and herbs vary, but the gluten/soy/tapioca ratios are the same. The process gets a lot more complicated, tho, since my biggest gripe about Big Ol Pile of Braised Seitan is that the texture is too uniform. I wanted a crust, some crunch, so I added some steps.
This recipe isn't vegan - it contains some butter, some honey. Easy conversions would be EarthBalance and Agave - they'd work fine, and the results would be slightly less rich. Let me know if you take that plunge, and how it turns out!
Seitan Pot Roast and Veggies, in a Crock Pot
makes 10 slices and tons of veggie - serves 10-12
For the Seitan:
Dry mix:
3 cups vital wheat gluten
1/2 cup tapioca flour
1/4 cup soy flour
1/4 cup nutritional yeast
2 tablespoons veggie bouillion powder
Tons of freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons fennel seed
Fresh nutmeg, a couple rasps
1 tablespoon hickory or smoked salt
1 tablespoon tarragon, rubbed
Wet mix:
2 tablespoons smoke flavor
2/3 cup water
1/3 cup olive oil
2 tablespoons tamari
6 cloves garlic, minced
1 tablespoon honey
Mix your dry ingredients well in a large bowl, make a well in the center, and while stirring with a fork (or be like me and use your paws!) add your wet ingredients. Grab and hunk and knead it for a few minutes, and shape it into a "roast", making sure it'll fit in your crockpot (the one I have, a friends, actually, is rather large).
We're not wrapping this in cheesecloth as many seitan recipes call for because we want a soft, slightly chewy texture. If you prefer your seitan super-dense, wrap away.
Accompanying Veggies:
1 package pearl onions, peeled
1 package tiny potatoes, pricked all over with a fork
1/4 fennel bulb, chopped
1 small head raddichio, chopped
12 garlic cloves, peeled
1 package whole baby bella mushrooms
1/2 package grape tomatoes
1 pound small carrots, both orange and purple, greens cut off
Layer some fennel on the bottom of the pot and put the roast on top. Scatter the remaining veggies around and on top of the roast.
For braising the seitan:
4 tablespoons butter
4 cloves garlic, minced
3/4 fennel bulb, chopped
2 tablespoons flavorful honey
2 stalks celery, chopped
1/2 package grape tomatoes, chopped
2 tablespoons sun-dried tomatoes, chopped fine
Fresh thyme, a sprig
Dash soy sauce
Dash hickory flavoring
4 cups well-seasoned vegetable stock (use mushroom, faux chicken, whatever you prefer)
1 cup bourbon
In a saucepot, melt your butter and add garlic, fennel, celery. Saute 5 minutes. Add tomatoes, dry and fresh, and cook until fresh tomatoes fall apart.
Add the rest of your ingredients and bring to a boil - then simmer 15 minutes until the bourbon has mellowed out a bit. Taste for salt, add if needed.
Assemble and cook:
Pour your broth over the roast, making sure it and most of the veggies are covered. Turn your crock pot to LOW and cook 3 hours, then turn to HIGH for another hour, hour and a half. Your seitan will be softer than if you used my regular method - that is OK, trust me!
Finishing touches:
1/2 cup flour
Fresh black pepper, ground
Canola oil, for shallow-frying
After it cools a bit, slice your roast into 1/4 inch thick slices. Heat your oil to medium-high. Dredge each piece of seitan in your flour mixture and gently place in the oil (I did this in a skillet and could fit two slices at once). Fry until browned and carefully flip, cooking 2 minutes on each side. Drain well on paper towels. Repeat.
This step gives the seitan a slightly crunchy, rough crust - a nice compliment to the soft, chewy interior. Worth the time and some smoke in the kitchen, says I!
To serve, cover the bottom of a large platter with the "unrecognizables" (read: delicious) like the fennel and raddichio from your crock pot and place the splayed roast slices out on top. Scatter the potatoes and mushrooms, etc, around the roast, tucking single parsley leaves behind and beside until you have a nice balance of color. Serve your cooking liquid alongside as gravy (I thickened mine with a butter/flour paste, a la JC, but you could easily use cornstarch if you'd prefer).
Laborious. But super-yum.
But when you're going to a foodie pre-Thanksgiving bash, and there's nothing but Meaters as far as the eye can see, well, a compromise isn't out of the question. Enter pot roast. Of Seitan.
The base of this dish isn't much different than my sausage recipe - flavors and herbs vary, but the gluten/soy/tapioca ratios are the same. The process gets a lot more complicated, tho, since my biggest gripe about Big Ol Pile of Braised Seitan is that the texture is too uniform. I wanted a crust, some crunch, so I added some steps.
This recipe isn't vegan - it contains some butter, some honey. Easy conversions would be EarthBalance and Agave - they'd work fine, and the results would be slightly less rich. Let me know if you take that plunge, and how it turns out!
Seitan Pot Roast and Veggies, in a Crock Pot
makes 10 slices and tons of veggie - serves 10-12
For the Seitan:
Dry mix:
3 cups vital wheat gluten
1/2 cup tapioca flour
1/4 cup soy flour
1/4 cup nutritional yeast
2 tablespoons veggie bouillion powder
Tons of freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons fennel seed
Fresh nutmeg, a couple rasps
1 tablespoon hickory or smoked salt
1 tablespoon tarragon, rubbed
Wet mix:
2 tablespoons smoke flavor
2/3 cup water
1/3 cup olive oil
2 tablespoons tamari
6 cloves garlic, minced
1 tablespoon honey
Mix your dry ingredients well in a large bowl, make a well in the center, and while stirring with a fork (or be like me and use your paws!) add your wet ingredients. Grab and hunk and knead it for a few minutes, and shape it into a "roast", making sure it'll fit in your crockpot (the one I have, a friends, actually, is rather large).
We're not wrapping this in cheesecloth as many seitan recipes call for because we want a soft, slightly chewy texture. If you prefer your seitan super-dense, wrap away.
Accompanying Veggies:
1 package pearl onions, peeled
1 package tiny potatoes, pricked all over with a fork
1/4 fennel bulb, chopped
1 small head raddichio, chopped
12 garlic cloves, peeled
1 package whole baby bella mushrooms
1/2 package grape tomatoes
1 pound small carrots, both orange and purple, greens cut off
Layer some fennel on the bottom of the pot and put the roast on top. Scatter the remaining veggies around and on top of the roast.
For braising the seitan:
4 tablespoons butter
4 cloves garlic, minced
3/4 fennel bulb, chopped
2 tablespoons flavorful honey
2 stalks celery, chopped
1/2 package grape tomatoes, chopped
2 tablespoons sun-dried tomatoes, chopped fine
Fresh thyme, a sprig
Dash soy sauce
Dash hickory flavoring
4 cups well-seasoned vegetable stock (use mushroom, faux chicken, whatever you prefer)
1 cup bourbon
In a saucepot, melt your butter and add garlic, fennel, celery. Saute 5 minutes. Add tomatoes, dry and fresh, and cook until fresh tomatoes fall apart.
Add the rest of your ingredients and bring to a boil - then simmer 15 minutes until the bourbon has mellowed out a bit. Taste for salt, add if needed.
Assemble and cook:
Pour your broth over the roast, making sure it and most of the veggies are covered. Turn your crock pot to LOW and cook 3 hours, then turn to HIGH for another hour, hour and a half. Your seitan will be softer than if you used my regular method - that is OK, trust me!
Finishing touches:
1/2 cup flour
Fresh black pepper, ground
Canola oil, for shallow-frying
After it cools a bit, slice your roast into 1/4 inch thick slices. Heat your oil to medium-high. Dredge each piece of seitan in your flour mixture and gently place in the oil (I did this in a skillet and could fit two slices at once). Fry until browned and carefully flip, cooking 2 minutes on each side. Drain well on paper towels. Repeat.
This step gives the seitan a slightly crunchy, rough crust - a nice compliment to the soft, chewy interior. Worth the time and some smoke in the kitchen, says I!
To serve, cover the bottom of a large platter with the "unrecognizables" (read: delicious) like the fennel and raddichio from your crock pot and place the splayed roast slices out on top. Scatter the potatoes and mushrooms, etc, around the roast, tucking single parsley leaves behind and beside until you have a nice balance of color. Serve your cooking liquid alongside as gravy (I thickened mine with a butter/flour paste, a la JC, but you could easily use cornstarch if you'd prefer).
Laborious. But super-yum.
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