tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-73769745661704809632024-03-05T11:14:26.591-05:00the adventures of a vermont hooliganKrystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.comBlogger209125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-55432002342591817052013-02-10T15:28:00.003-05:002013-02-10T15:30:39.048-05:00WhoaHas it been that long? Yes, it has. It's been forever. But I haven't actually been silent. I'm just blogging about books <a href="http://littlegreenbookworm.blogspot.com/">here</a>. So mosey on over and check that out. Maybe if I have time I'll throw some things up here, but for now, it's just books.<br />
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If you are curious about how my year of trash-free eating went, the answer is: awesome. I am still buying mostly in bulk and only buying packaged food that can not be gotten unpackaged. Example: coconut oil, seaweed, miso (unless I want to drive 2 hours to a co-op that does carry it in bulk, which I don't), tempeh, etc. Not too shabby.<br />
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Trash output in this house that contains two humans, two cats, and a snake: one grocery bag a month, one small compost bucket a week.<br />
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Before you start yelling about the grocery bags, yes I do use reusable bags when I shop. These are foraged bags from work that were going to be discarded anyway. Many of them are paper.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-53704058803055389682011-09-08T17:05:00.004-04:002011-09-08T17:21:50.064-04:00More feelings toward trash-free eatingAll and all, this diet is going just as well today as it was when I started. I'm happily chowing down on fresh fruits and veggies and I even made some cloth bags to get bulk produce in. My trips tot he store have to be far more calculated than ever before (especially now since many of the roads to my favorite co-ops have been damaged by the hurricane), but my everyday needs are easily met by the farmer's market and the local health food store.<br /><br />We had a pot luck at work today, so last night I made some yummy peanut butter oatmeal cookies (nom nom nom). The food was mostly crappy stuff I would never touch, but OH MY GOD SOMEONE BROUGHT TRISCUITS! My immediate reaction was something along the lines of "come to me my precious, salty, crunchy, heaven-in-a-box treat!" I proceeded to eat a few more than I probably should have, but I would like to see your self-control when paired with a stack of Triscuits after abstaining from any form of packaged food for months on end. Those crackers won't stand a chance. <br /><br />Baby spinach was also on the pot-luck menu. I took a few bites because I thought I should have some greens with lunch, if available. Mistake. Another side effect of only eating fresh unpackaged foods, is that packaged produce tastes terrible. Like eating leafy cardboard. I dumped some homemade salsa on it (made with tomatoes, peppers, onions and cilantro right from the garden) and that improved it considerably.<br /><br />Then I ate a few more Triscuits.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-86240122527091223182011-08-15T10:07:00.002-04:002011-08-15T10:14:09.583-04:00Reflections on month threeOK. I figured out the hardest part of the no-trash diet. It's this blog. My spare time is down to almost nothing right now, so when I have it, I don't usually want to spend it writing in the blog. I have books to write about and recipes to post and a few stories about food trash. I went to SolarFest and NYC and thought about food waste and thing to put in this blog the whole time, but sitting down to write... eh. So I'm sorry. Kind of. But I did conquer the mountain of dishes in the sink and I plan to make a blueberry pie today, so maybe I'll snap some pictures and do a post when I finally crash-land on the couch. Cross your fingers.
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<br />Just know that even though my dedication to blogging is not so much, I'm still 100% on my year of no food waste. Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-8749506075953924892011-07-27T07:00:00.001-04:002011-08-15T09:58:55.079-04:00Zucchini Salad2-3 green onions
<br />1 Large green zucchini
<br />1 Large yellow zucchini (summer squash)
<br />1 Large any other kind of in season squash (globe, pattypan, scallopini, etc)
<br />1 Large cucumber
<br />2 Large carrots , or 3-4 small ones
<br />2 T Olive oil (not extra virgin) or veggie oil if you prefer
<br />Salt
<br />½ t Garam Masala
<br />AC vinegar
<br />Sugar
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<br />Chop up green onion and dice squashes into bite-sized cubes. Heat oil in a large pan, add garam masala and turn heat to med-low. Add onion and toss until coated, then add squashes. Salt to taste. While the squash is cooking, chop the cucumber into bite sized chunks and set aside. Continue cooking squash and turning in pan until it's cooked and a bit soft, but still has a bit of crunch. This should only take a few minutes.
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<br />Remove from heat and transfer into a large glass food storage container. Allow it to cool to room temperature, then add cucumbers, mix and put in fridge. Store until cool.
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<br />Grate carrots into a small bowl and add some AC vinegar and a sprinkle of sugar. Serve shredded carrot on top of squash salad.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-61879846106934276922011-07-26T07:00:00.001-04:002011-07-27T09:05:01.904-04:00Chocolate Mint Rice Milk½ recipe of rice milk found <a href="http://www.veganreader.com/2009/05/17/how-to-make-rice-milk-and-stop-supporting-rice-dream/" target="_new">here</a>. This will make extra, but cutting the recipe down even further seems silly. I added a handful of raw cashews to each blender batch.<br />2 T cocoa powder<br />2 T Raw sugar<br />3-4 fresh mint leaves, bruised a bit to draw out flavor<br /><br />Fill blender with rice milk, add cocoa, sugar and mint. Blend. Taste and adjust. Strain into small mason jars for single serving travel cups. Shake well before serving.<br /><br />I actually didn't strain mine because I don't mind the mint particles, but some people might. You'll also want to make this as close to the time you're going to use it a possible, because in my experience, this rice milk does not keep very long.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-54969773260672340172011-07-25T12:27:00.000-04:002011-07-25T12:28:09.165-04:00White Bean Hummus2 cups cooked white beans<br />1 large clove garlic (or about 4 scapes, depending on size and season)<br />4T olive oil<br />2T tahini<br />2T AC vinegar or lemon juice<br />Salt to taste<br />Water<br /><br />Throw everything but the water into a food processor and process until smooth. Add a little water at a time until you reach the consistency you are looking for. Hummus is a completely personal experience, and rather hard to ruin. Adjust flavors to suit your palate. You can use more olive oil and less water to get a richer flavor, but water works if you're on tight budget or running low on oil.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-68847151837403841192011-07-07T07:00:00.004-04:002011-07-07T22:22:26.925-04:00Paper plate picnics are for parasites<img style="float:right; margin:0 0 2px 2px; width: 270px; height: 200px;" src="http://blog.restaurantware.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/PICNIC-BASKET-2.jpg" border="0" alt="Grab your bonnet honey, we are going on a picnic!" />I was reading this silly thing on the internet about famous picnics in literature and I suddenly got an unsurpressable urge to have a picnic. What better day than July 4th? My friend Gravy was coming to town that day to hang out, so I decided to drag him along. The weather has been hot and humid so I wanted something that would be cold and refreshing, but not too simplistic like macaroni salad and veggie burgers. At the farmer's market on Sunday the stalls seemed to be overflowing with zucchinis of all shapes and sizes, so I grabbed some greens and yellows and started a mental meal planner. Cold, seared zucchini with cucumbers, shredded carrots and white bean hummus. Perfect.<br /><br />Monday finally came and I headed to the kitchen to start my plans when I realized that the perfect companion to this meal would be pita bread. Being on a no-trash diet means making everything from scratch, and I was out of yeast. The health food store in town pre-bags all of their bulk yeast, so I have to make special arrangements to fill up my own jar, which doesn't work for last-minute plans. I also realized that chocolate milk would be needed. Obviously. As usual, my quick projects turned into huge and frantic undertakings.<br /><br />Rice milk takes about three hours to make and a big pot, which I didn't own. I decided to finally use that money the parents sent me as a house warming gift and bopped over to the local kitchen store to buy a nice stainless steel stewing pot. Then I scurried over to a friend's house to snag a few teaspoons of yeast. 1:30pm and I hadn't even started yet! The pita would need time to rise as well! At least the white beans were done though. <br /><br />Gravy got to my place a little after 2pm and I put him to work shredding carrots while I cooked the zucchini. When the rice was done cooking I put him in charge of straining, and he promptly spilled a bunch of it all over my pristine kitchen. Taking deep breaths is the key to sharing a kitchen. Luckily he brought his dog who took care of anything that managed to make it to the ground. Hummus in the food processor, cocoa in the rice milk, zucchini in the fridge, pitas on the counter cooling and all at once the food was together in time for picnic supper. A July 4th miracle!<br /><br />Everything got packed in reusable containers. I took two normal, totally breakable and oh-man-I-have-to-wash-these-when-we're-done plates and forgot the spoon for serving (good thing I remembered a cloth napkin when our fingers had to be used instead). Everything got carefully packed into two fabric bags along with a blanket and some hippy-dippy bug spray. Presto! Delicious trash-free picnic!<br /><br />Along comes another multi-part post of recipes; White bean hummus, zucchini salad, and chocolate-mint rice milk. I won't be posting the pita recipe because it wasn't mine and it didn't turn out as I had planned. Mine were a semi-failure and Gravy laughed at my dismay. Jerk. If anyone has any good pita bread recipes to share, please do!Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-13400111725827522392011-06-30T07:00:00.003-04:002011-08-15T10:02:36.106-04:00Reflections on month twoI still can't get over the initial reaction that most people have to my no-trash diet, “Wow, that must be so hard!” I can't stress enough how easy it is. It's a little weird how we're predisposed to think that we need waste to live our lives. It's crazy how quickly we reach for a disposable item without thinking if we really need it, or if we can use something else.
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<br />I was at the grocery store with a friend the other day. I had brought my own bags for produce, but not enough. He hadn't brought any. I quietly got what I needed and when I ran out of bags, I simply loaded the rest of the produce (things that were large and not fragile, like potatoes and bananas) into my basket without bags. The checkout people don't care. We met up a few minutes later and he commented on my free-floating produce, “Oh, I hadn't thought of that.” I'm not judgmental. I know how automatic certain things are, because it's taken me effort to program myself to think “do I need this?” before I use anything. I told him I do this all the time, and when the checkout person showed no signs of interest in the lack of bag, he accepted this practice as something to use in the future.
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<br />The same thing happens when I take my container to the bagel place. It starts a lot of conversations. Even the ladies at the local health food store have said my containers have made them think about their own disposable habits. As with everything, I'm happy to answer questions that are asked of me, but I almost never bring the issue up unless I need to.
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<br />I must make a small confession though. That rule about not eating out twice a week... hasn't really been super accurate. I like to grab a bagel before work sometimes. Not more than once a week, but it happens. I also like to eat at the farmers market. And I like to go out to the bar with my friends after work. So sometimes I go out more often. However, I have my container in hand at the bagel place, don't order bottled cider at the bar, and the farmer's market, well, I don't think I need to explain that there's not really a lot of waste involved with anything there, as compared with a restaurant or grocery store. I don't feel guilty, I just think it was not a very useful rule.
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<br />The trek continues.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-77553506635794841232011-06-29T07:00:00.000-04:002011-06-29T07:00:01.073-04:00Fiesta Food! - Part 3 of 3Red Chile<br /><br />1/4 Cup water<br />2 T oil (I use olive for better flavor,but you can go neutral)<br />1 T flour (your choice, I use whole wheat pastry because it's what I have and adds no flavor)<br />4 tablespoons (at least) red chile powder<br />pinch of cumin<br />salt to taste<br /><br />In a small sauce pan, combine water, oil and chile. Heat and mix until everything is combined fully. Add flour and cumin, heat until thick and bubbly. Add Salt. Adjust spices (aka, add more chile). Heat a bit more to bring out the heat. It should be thick and red and amazing and unforgettable.<br /><br />In terms of what is “traditional” or not, I don't really care. You can email me and tell me I'm doing this all wrong and that it's not really traditional red chile unless you make it standing on one leg with a <u><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gila_monster" target="_new">gila monster</a></u> stuck to your head, but honestly, I don't care. If it's vegan and it tastes good, I'm eating it. That being said, you can make this sauce with any red chile powder, but if you really want something amazing, you'll make it with red chiles grown in NM. Specifically Hatch, NM. <br /><br />Shit. I misplaced my gila monster again.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-39879812023061451622011-06-28T07:04:00.002-04:002011-08-15T10:05:21.133-04:00Fiesta Food! - Part 2 of 3This isn't exactly fiesta food, but since I used it for tacos, it's fiesta food today.
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<br />Seitan
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<br />1 cup vital wheat gluten
<br />3/4 cup veggie broth or water (you might need more or less, so add slowly)
<br />2 T soy sauce
<br />Spices of choice (stick with powders and nothing chunky)
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<br />Mix up your dry ingredients in a large bowl and make a well in the center. Pour water in and mix by hand. Mix in soy sauce. Knead. And knead. And Knead for about 5 minutes. You MUST do this by hand. Let it sit for a few minutes, then knead again. Break up your glutenous ball of yum into three or four pieces and stretch them out as flat as you can. These will expand when cooking, so the thinner you get it now, the better. Bring a large pot of water or vegetable broth to a boil and drop these bad boys in. Simmer for about an hour. They're going to expand, so make sure the pot is pretty huge.
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<br />You can store seitan really well in the freezer. Just be sure to cut it up before freezing, which will make it easier to work with later.
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<br />Next post: Red ChileKrystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-12803680193526491162011-06-27T07:00:00.002-04:002011-06-27T07:00:01.571-04:00Fiesta Food! - Part 1 of 3I talk a lot about my job at the bookstore, but the truth is, that's a part-time job. The job that pays my bills is an office job I have for a non-profit. Things that I love about it include: schedule flexibility, no dress code, and we will accept any excuse to have a party at work. This month we lose our <u><a href="http://urchinmovement.com/" target="_new">Urchin</a></u> co-worker, Sarah. To see her off properly she would need a rockin fiesta. Sarah is my vegan partner in crime at the office, so I was ever so excited to make awesome seitan tacos for her.<br /><br />I'm not going to post the recipe for the tacos, because it came from Terry Hope-Romero's cookbook <u><a href="http://www.indiebound.org/book/9780738212739" target="_new">Viva Vegan</a></u>. It's an excellent book and you should all buy it. Also, I (not so) secretly want to be her. What I <i>am</i> going to post are three staples in my home that can be made with (little or) no waste: seitan, corn tortillas and red chile.<br /><br />The only tricky parts about making this 100% waste free is the <u><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masa" target="_new">masa harina</a></u>, a kind of corn meal that's treated with lime and is used to make corn tortillas, and wax paper. I can't find masa herna in bulk around here, but luckily I had a huge bag in my kitchen. If I run out before the year is up I guess I just cry. I also use wax paper with my tortilla press (instructions online always recommend plastic wrap, but that's just silly and wax paper can be reused much more easily). I use the same two bits of paper until they are totally ruined and I really can't get away with it anymore. I've had the same roll of wax paper for over a year and I'm only half way through it, so I can attest to the usefulness of wax paper.<br /><br />All of these things are easy to make, and significantly cheaper and healthier than what you'll buy in the store.<br /><br />Oh-my-god-easy Corn Tortillas<br /><br />½ cup Masa Harina<br />1/3 cup water<br />Pinch of salt<br /><br />Mix masa harina and salt in a bowl. Make a well. Pour water into the well and mix by hand for 2 minutes. Adjust if the dough seems too sticky or too crumbly*. Make into 4 balls. Heat a pan that is just lightly brushed with cooking oil. Depending on your pan, you can do this dry. You know your cookware better than me (I hope). Line bottom of tortilla press with wax paper, place ball in center. Place a bit of wax paper on top. Press. Toss into pan. Cook. Flip. Cook. Repeat with remaining tortillas. Done. Store in plastic in the fridge.<br /><br />*Use cation when adding water and only add a teaspoon at a time. Too much water will create dough that sticks to everything but itself, is difficult to work with, impossible to please, and may even put bubble gum in your favorite pair of shoes. So easy on the water.<br /><br />Make 4 tortillas. Duh.<br /><br />Next up: SeitanKrystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-36232476506414213782011-06-22T07:00:00.002-04:002011-06-25T23:26:53.243-04:00Month one recap- BelatedSeveral people have asked me what the hardest part of this challenge has been so far. At one month in there's only been one big setback and that is eating out. Restaurants always want to give you napkins, there are always unexpected wastes like toothpicks, chopsticks and wax paper, and then if you don't finish your food, there's take out containers. <br /><br />I had lunch in Albany just after this challenge started and quickly realized that I would need to bring my own container for leftovers and also my own chopsticks. I have both of these items now ready to go, the tricky part will be remembering them when I go out. <br />Napkins, napkins, napkins. I've asked at least one person to omit my napkin, but in most places they are already on the table. Chances are, if you ask that they be removed they'll just end up in he trash anyway. I think I've also mentioned my extreme discomfort with drawing too much attention to myself, or being anything other than completely forgettable two minutes after I've left a person's presence. I could say it would be nice to get over my fears, but it wouldn't. I don't like people who draw extra attention to themselves and I like not being one of them. I don't have a problem asking people to leave the napkin out if I'm a regular, but I might just have to deal with a stray napkin or two when I eat somewhere new.<br /><br />I'm open to suggestions though. Maybe only eat at places that use cloth napkins? Pass it off as a serious napkin phobia and say that I've brought my own? Right. Right.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-53898432301073325472011-06-21T07:25:00.005-04:002011-06-25T21:15:31.049-04:00Farewell My Subaru by Doug Fine<onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://images.indiebound.com/899/977/9780812977899.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; width: 200px; height: 300px;" src="http://images.indiebound.com/899/977/9780812977899.jpg" border="0" alt="" /><br />I stumbled upon this book in one of Brattleboro's FIVE bookstores. It was on sale so I picked it up, thinking it looked like fun. Turns out you can judge a book by its cover, because fun it is. Doug Fine is a humorous writer and a great story teller. At 200 pages it's a quick and enjoyable read but still full of insight.<br /><br />Fine moves to the New Mexican desert with the goal of kicking his fossil fuel habit and getting off the grid. He has no experience whatsoever with ranching, farming, or any of the things people need to be self-sufficient. To top it off, he's a Wal-Mart addict. But, he kicks his addiction early in the book and makes no secret of the fact that he asks for help whenever he can. He also buys two goats to help him get his other habit off-grid: ice cream.<br /><br />A few solar panels, and one veggie oil run monster truck later and Fine is well on his way to reaching his goals. He plants a garden (several times, due to many crop-decimating hail storms), installs a solar hot water heater and gets himself some chickens. He almost makes the task seem simple (given the right friends and enough money, of course). He certainly makes it seem fun, especially with all of the humorous and well-placed recipes (rattlesnake stew when he discovers a rattlesnake near his home, although in this case the rattlesnake escapes unharmed).<br /><br />The part that I found most interesting was his veggie oil car. I had all but forgotten about these little miracles with my secret (ok, not so secret) obsession with buying an electric car and powering it with solar panels. Of course a much cheaper option is to get an old diesel car and convert it to veggie oil. It's a great deal all around because normally restaurants have to pay someone to pick up their used oil and normally drivers have to pay higher and higher prices for their gas. The image of a massive fuel-guzzling truck roaring around town spurting out chinese food-scented emissions is almost too good to pas up!<br /><br />My only criticism of this book is the lack of sources. Throughout the story Fine drops a few facts and figures having to do with energy and resource consumption, typical statistics to find in a book on environmentalism, but he sites no sources. Where did this information come from? There is no bibliography, no where to go for further reading. If he picked these facts up from the internet, what are the websites? Who did the studies? Who collected this data? I've never come across a book with facts that lacked sources and I found the whole thing confusing.<br /><br />All in all, it was a great book and although it's not in my section at the bookstore now, it will soon.<br /><br /><u><a href="http://www.indiebound.org/book/9780812977899" target="_new">Buy it Indie!</a></u>Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-7048821384858962102011-05-25T18:09:00.002-04:002011-05-25T18:11:22.618-04:00Moving!Oh hello again. I'm just here to tell you that I'm moving right now. First my office, then myself. Posting really isn't going to happen for a little while, but I'm still cooking and still shunning waste, so never fear! The no trash blog is coming back soon.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-28827828738517140322011-05-24T07:00:00.000-04:002011-05-24T07:00:06.609-04:00Hello potatoes!Here are a few quick things you can do with potatoes which don't involve waste, or more than a few minutes of your time and attention. I'm in love with potatoes, so I make these things often. They're so easy that I feel stupid for posting them.<br /><br />No waste baked potatoes<br /><br />Take a potato, poke some holes in it with a fork, rub some olive oil into it, throw it in the oven directly on the rack and bake at 400 for about 30 minutes. Viola. Potato. Who says you need aluminum foil to bake a potato?<br /><br />(Charles, you can even do this in a toaster oven. It will take a bit longer.)<br /><br />Potato chips<br /><br />Take a potato, slice it into chips (very, very thin, if you can), place slices on a baking sheet, brush slices with oil, sprinkle on some salt, bake at 350 until crispy and amazing. Goodbye bagged potato chips. Hello saving money and resources!<br /><br />Mashed purple potatoes<br /><br />Take several purple potatoes, quarter them, boil them until soft, transfer to a bowl, add a bit of rice milk, salt, pepper, olive oil, a tiny dab of coconut cream (trust me. Dooo it), minced garlic and then mash. Mash some more. Mash a little bit more....... now STOP! ACK! YOU'VE OVER-MASHED IT!!!! No I'm kidding, it's ready, just eat. Side note: Isn't it super cool how the boiling water turns blue??!<br /><br />French fries (but baked)<br /><br />Take a few potatoes, slice into wedges, put into glass bake tray, coat the bottom with a thin layer of olive oil, add salt and pepper and garlic, bake at 350 until done. No need to flip. Seriously. You'll need ketchup and mustard for these. Spicy ketchup...mmm.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-66102164434240923552011-05-23T07:00:00.000-04:002011-05-23T07:00:10.420-04:00Fiddleheads!!!After several unsuccessful attempts to find fiddleheads I was getting ready to call up a few friends and ask them where they find theirs. Then one morning I was taking my compost out to the woods behind my house and nearly stepped right on a patch of fiddleheads! I gathered some up and tossed them in the fridge before heading to work. <br /><br />I rode my bike that morning and as I coasted down the office driveway I peeked into the garden and what did I see? FIDDLEHEADS! The whole garden at my office is overrun. I gathered a bunch of them and had a wonderful fiddlehead stir fry dinner. I even left one on a co-workers desk as a present.<br /><br />There is some mixed information out there about fiddleheads and how safe they are. Some websites and books will tell you that you need to cook them before they are safe. There doesn't seem to be much evidence of that. What is more probable is that the people who got sick had eaten a different variety of fern than the ostrich fiddlehead. Having compared the two kinds side by side, it's really quite easy to tell the difference between the different varieties and I'm not worried about eating the wrong kind. The key thing is that edible fiddleheads are smooth and shiny and have a very deep groove along the inside of the stems. When they are uncurled, they stick straight up and don't lay close to the ground.<br /><br />I like to throw my fiddleheads into my stir fry and cook them just a little. They add a great, clean crunch and some healthy, early greens to dinner. Bon appetit!Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-58919906743214293912011-05-19T07:00:00.003-04:002011-05-19T16:35:46.418-04:00Macaroni Salad<img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 133px;" src="http://www.talleys.com/talleygram/recipes/photos/MacSalad.jpg" border="0" alt="" /><br /><br />As it gets warmer I always start to crave macaroni salad. Delicious, cold macaroni on a warm day is a good indication that winter really is over and the next 6 months are going to be lovely. I almost never make it though because it means buying a jar of vegan mayo and I don't really use it for anything but macaroni and potato salads, which means it would just go bad. Buying a jar is out of the question anyway because of the no trash thing, so I did a quick google search for homemade vegan mayo and came up the modified concoction below. <br /><br />I forgot to take a picture of my food, so here's a random one from the internet. Don't worry, it's vegan too.<br /><br />Half a block of tofu<br />2 T water<br />2 T olive oil<br />½ t apple cider vinegar<br />pinch of salt<br />½ t sugar or other sweetener (I used agave syrup)<br /><br />Put all of this into a blender and blend until smooth. You may want to add things a little at a time and taste as you go. The wonderful thing about making your own mayo is that you can make it as strong as you want. You can go sour or sweet. You can use veggie oil instead of olive oil for a more neutral taste. <br /><br />I combined this with some pasta, chopped onion, sugar, mustard, salt, pepper, celery and PRESTO, macaroni salad for my spring celebration.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-80459336878726192482011-05-18T10:56:00.000-04:002011-05-18T10:57:31.203-04:00Meh. Sorry.If there's one thing readers should know about me, it's that I never post as often as I say I will. Never fear, I have some posts written and more are coming soon.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-57089403748359780162011-05-04T07:00:00.002-04:002011-05-04T10:06:58.184-04:00Recipe: Veggie stir fry with coconut rice<img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 140px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgRSlJhueO8WLAIjN2psuYIMOdoE5GGqhFlTwLx1dpBYpVFY7O_R4kI2OedSH5kjPnJQn2zUG61TFviJ-e-fnK3NdQB4BLgzhEWCYTxC8e_45xUEIc3tUYWggZ1sK08sCSXxR35X1sRSSY/s320/IMG_1538.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5602600322704510034" /><br />As with all cooking, I encourage people to adjust things to taste. This is a concoction that I really enjoy, but you can just as easily skip the wild rice and go with all brown (though you'd be a fool). I used a lot more hot sauce than I indicated below and more mustard and chile, but not everyone likes spicy food like I do. But so help me, if you defile this recipe with a green bell pepper... I will find you in your home and rip that freaking pepper out of your hand. And then compost it.<br /><br />For the rice:<br />1/4 cup coconut milk<br />1 1/4 cup water<br />1/4 cup wild rice (soaked overnight if you have time)<br />1/2 cup short grain brown rice (soaked overnight if you have time)<br /><br />For the stir fry:<br />1 Small yellow onion, chopped<br />3 cloves garlic- minced<br />1 Yellow or red bell pepper, chopped<br />A big bunch of swiss chard, chopped (probably about 6 cups, once chopped)<br />2 medium carrots, chopped<br />A little olive oil for frying<br />1/2 t Chile powder<br />1/2 t favorite hot sauce<br />1/2 t mustard powder<br />1/2 t ginger powder<br />Salt to taste<br />Sesame oil to taste<br />A touch of maple syrup (optional)<br /><br /><br />For rice:<br />Put water and coconut milk into a saucepan and add wild rice. Cover. Bring to boil, and simmer for 5 minutes, then add brown rice and continue simmering until done. Don't stir! When rice is done, remove from heat, but allow it to sit covered in the pot for about 10 minutes to steam. Fluff with a fork to bring wild rice to the top.<br /><br />For the stir fry:<br />Heat olive oil on medium heat in large frying pan with spices and hot sauce. When it's hot enough, add the onions and some salt. Cook until soft then add garlic, bell pepper, chard and carrots. The chard will cook down, so don't worry if the pan overflows and you can't add it all at once. Adjust salt and continue to stir fry until chard is cooked down and veggies are extra-tasty. If the chard is a little more bitter than you'd like, add a touch of maple syrup (don't go overboard). Remove from heat and add a little sesame oil.<br /><br />Serve veggies over rice. Oranges make a great dessert after this yum-fest.<br /><br />Serves: 2Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-69525208240404935782011-05-02T07:00:00.000-04:002011-05-02T07:00:17.837-04:00ForagingOn Easter Sunday, with no other plans to speak of, I decided to go for a hike and try and locate some fiddleheads, a much adored spring treat. I took my field guide to edible plants book with me, just in case I saw something else that might be snack-worthy. I'm 100% new to this in every way, so I really didn't expect to find anything. I walked over to Benson's hole and proceeded upstream. I imagine a lot of the area is private property, but I didn't encounter any fences or signs, so I just went along my merry way.<br /><br />As expected, I found nothing. May have been a bit early for fiddleheads anyway. I'll be trying again as much as possible over the next few days. Fiddleheads should be popping up at any time. Wild asparagus too. I decided to proceed to town and forage the fridge at the non-profit office. I found half a bottle of champagne from a celebration we had had the week prior. Still fizzy, I took it home. <br /><br />This made me think that maybe dumpster diving counts as no-trash food. It's already in the trash, at least I'd be putting some of it to good use and reducing some of the trash, without adding to it. It's a thought. Though the idea of creeping around the Price Chopper dumpsters at night really isn't at all appealing. If only we had a Trader Joe's. I've been told they have the best dumpster food. I tip my hat to Food Not Bombs on this one.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-27607473977211908182011-05-01T07:00:00.000-04:002011-05-01T07:00:09.504-04:00So it beginsThe last round of trash this month. Yikes. I'm looking forward to giving up Woodchuck; I spend way too much of my money on it. I've been thinking of giving up most of my alcohol drinking anyway because of my money situation. It's just empty calories anyway. Sorry folks, gonna go drown my sorrows in a cup of tea.<br /><br />I am going to miss Liz Lovely though. Best freaking vegan cookies ever, and my favorite gluten free brand as well. Still, not buying junk food for a year (home made potato chips, anyone?) will be healthy for me and my budget.<br /><br />To top this all off, the idea of making paper out of my receipts and produce stickers was offered to me and I love it! I just need to find a few supplies and I can start grinding all that crap up into my own brand of paper. Who has a few pieces of scrap wood and screen for me?<br /><br />April 20: Liz Lovely cookie wrappings <br />April 21: Eggplant sticker<br />April 22: Napkin, empty woodchuck bottle<br />April 23: Potato chip bag, avocado sticker<br />April 24: None<br />April 25: empty woodchuck bottle<br />April 26: Paper bagel wrapper, empty woodchuck bottle<br />April 27: Napkin, wax paper, empty woodchuck bottle, straw and straw wrapper<br />April 28: A bit of parchment paper<br />April 29: None<br />April 30: Foil wrapperKrystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-34749334500027157822011-04-28T07:00:00.007-04:002011-05-03T17:14:56.345-04:00Dressing!When I first started living on the farm a few years ago we ate salad all the time. Bonnie and Oliver never buy dressing, instead they just made it themselves right before the meal. I never really considered this before living with them. Salad dressing is just one of those things I took for granted as something that needed to be purchased pre-made. I had no idea how to make it. <br /><br />Oliver seemed to think it was a silly to buy it from the store; a complete waste of money. He's right. I've been making my own dressing ever since then. I even wrote down the ingredients to my favorite store-bought dressing so I can make it at home whenever I want. This is not that recipe. Maybe later.<br /><br />I was reading some cooking magazine the other night while it was slow at work and I came across a salad dressing recipe that used avocado. I instantly forgot what was in the magazine recipe (it was probably boring anyway). However, it did inspire me to create the one below the other night. I thought it was amazing and I threw it on shredded red cabbage. Instant treat!<br /><br /><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 140px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjfAlnH4qM6zhTv5KoL1ngJVatXKsDjWTIBgQGXsQJw8IpjzgFnk_6hLFBNgWyfwkIt7hlzH8aZKEo4D8Owe2-dQK_8_CG35y3pAmODaZdLh125N5ymqEDS_vP_5ndXXZ1v0SmcU0PqbCE/s320/IMG_1518.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5600382245645231858" /><br />Creamy Avocado Dressing<br />½ an avocado<br />1 small garlic clove<br />½ cup olive oil<br />2 T tahini<br />¼ cup water<br />Salt to taste<br />Chives or green onion to taste<br /><br />Throw everything except the chives/green onions into a food processor. Blend until smooth. Add green onion a little at a time, tasting as you go. Depending on how strong they are, it can easily overpower the subtle avocado. Adjust other ingredients as necessary. Enjoy.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-83358253321579227002011-04-25T07:00:00.002-04:002011-04-27T18:06:03.766-04:00The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved by Sandor Ellix Katz<onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://images.indiebound.com/110/392/9781933392110.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 267px; height: 400px;" src="http://images.indiebound.com/110/392/9781933392110.jpg" border="0" alt="" /><br />I loved this book so much that the whole time I was reading it, I just wanted to find Mr. Katz and shake his hand. And then invite him over for dinner.<br /><br />The bookstore had this book sitting on the shelf for about a year and no one had purchased it. Our book buyer wanted me to pull this lovely treasure from the shelf and return it to the publishers to make room for books that might sell better. I couldn't do it. Even though I had not yet read the book, I knew that with a title like this one, it had to be good. So I promised to read the book, write a review and attempt to hand-sell the crap out of it. And although my hand-selling skills are limited, I will certainly talk to anyone willing to listen about the reasons this book deserves a spot on the shelves.<br /><br />This book mixes the some of the good bits of Pollan, Kingsolver, Bittman, even a bit of McKibben. The point is, you can pick up this book anywhere along your journey to food knowledge and activism. It can be a beginning, or it can be the next book in a long series of food system information. Katz touches on environmentalism, heath, the overcomplicated food system, and even throws in some recipes. <br /><br />What's even better is that Katz doesn't stop short after bringing up all of the problems, he gives examples of what others are doing to solve these problems. He cites specific organizations and people who fight the system and how they are doing it. Each chapter has several pages of resources for more information on the problems and solutions. The bibliography alone is enough reason to buy this book. Getting through it will probably keep me occupied for years.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.indiebound.org/book/9781933392110" target="_new">Buy it indie!</a>Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-30258677768170944992011-04-21T07:00:00.007-04:002011-04-21T14:07:25.715-04:00Eggplant steaks<onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 250px; height: 243px;" src="http://recipes.terra-organics.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Eggplants.jpg" border="0" alt="" /><br />This isn't really a recipe, so much as instructions, but I made some eggplant a few weeks ago and forced an eggplant hater to try it. Turns out it got a vote of approval and now she's asking for the recipe. Here is an attempt at one.<br /><br />2 medium sized eggplants<br />½ cup olive oil (more or less depending on the vessel you use to marinate)<br />salt to taste<br />chile powder to taste<br />2 garlic cloves, minced<br />balsamic vinegar to taste<br />2 T maple syrup<br />2 T BBQ sauce<br /><br />Slice the eggplant lengthwise into 4 “steaks.” Fill a large bowl with warm, salted water and soak the eggplant sliced in it for about 15 minutes. I weigh them down with another bowl of water on top. Don't skip this step, it will cut a lot of the bitterness associated with eggplant.<br /><br />I mix everything in the baking pan (not a baking sheet, think large brownie pan), this works fine with glass because it's easy to clean later. Taste the marinade and adjust spices and ingredients as you see fit. It should be slightly sweet to counter any possible bitterness, but you're not making eggplant candy (wait... mmmm).<br /><br />Make some slits lengthwise in the eggplant to help it absorb the marinade. Place all of the slices in the pan and try not to put any on top of any others. I realize you could put everything into a ziplock bag and not have an issue, but I never do this, 1. because I don't have ziplock bags, 2. because this is a no trash diet, and 3. because plastic leaches nastiness into food.<br /><br />Marinate for 15-20 minutes, then flip and marinate some more. I kind of shake the mixture around to coat the tops as well as soaking the bottoms. <br /><br />Throw the whole thing in the oven and bake at 350 for about 10-15 minutes. Keep an eye on it. When the eggplants are nice and soft, but not mushy, they're done. <br /><br />I like to serve it with brown rice.<br /><br />Serves 4Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7376974566170480963.post-42452026453361888692011-04-20T07:00:00.001-04:002011-04-27T18:10:00.234-04:00Round two of trash confessionsI don't have much to say about all this, other than I ate out a lot more than usual this week. The local sandwich place charges a fortune for these really yummy sandwiches. I think it might be to cover the cost of the half roll of saran wrap they use to pack up your sandwich. Sheesh. I'm tempted to ask them about bringing my own container, but in this case, I think my wallet will thank me if I just abstain from this place all year.<br /><br />April 15: Straw and wrapper, napkin, empty potato chip bag<br />April 16: Paper wrapping from bagel, empty potato chip bag<br />April 17: Styrofoam bowl, plastic fork and spoon, paper plate, tiny paper cup, paper ice cream cup<br />April 18: Plastic wrap, paper bag<br />April 19: Foil wrapping, napkin<br /><br />Coming soon: Recipes! I'm working on these tonight. Really. I am.Krystahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03827189534227800936noreply@blogger.com0