Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Earth Day Was Yesterday
You know when you love bananas so much that you buy like 20 of them and think to yourself, I'm gonna eat all these mofos before they go bad? You know when you can't keep up with the banana commitment and the bananas start to go brown and get nastypants and you don't have the heart to throw them away, but you also can't eat them because they taste like chewed up baby food? At this moment you remember how the ripest/brownest bananas are the best for making banana bread, and you just want comfort food, so at 11pm on a Monday night you decide to make said banana bread? Yes. Let's go.
Easy Peasy Banana Bread
adapted from common sense
3 medium-sized over ripened bananas
2 eggs
1/3 cup vegetable oil
2/3 cup sugar
1 3/4 cup flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 tablespoon cinnamon
Pinch of salt
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit Sift flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt into a bowl, and stir until combined.
2. Peel bananas and remove the phloem from the peeled banana. (Fun fact: phloem is the correct term for those stringy things on a banana! Knowledge!)
3. In a separate bowl from the dry ingredients, mush the peeled bananas. Add eggs, vanilla extract, and vegetable oil to banana bowl. Mush ingredients together with wooden spoon (or giant spoon) until completely combined.
4. Stir dry ingredients into the wet ingredients little by little until completely combined.
5. Grease a 4x8 inch loaf pan or (in my case) an 8x8x2 inch cake pan, and pour batter evenly into the pan.
6. Bake for 60-70 minutes or until top is golden brown. Remove from oven, and allow to cool (or burn the roof of your mouth eating it before cooled... your choice). Enjoy!
So my issue with the banana bread was that, as someone who is used to baking 10 minute cookies, it was very difficult to wait the whole 60-70 minutes for the bread to be ready. If you're looking for less of a bread crust on the outside, and more of a banana bread cake, then do what I did and pull it out 20 minutes early.
OR if you are more patient, then wait the whole 70 minutes and sit on your bed watching Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives while licking the remaining batter from the bowl... hypothetically.
GODSPEED & GOODNIGHT.
Monday, April 1, 2013
April (Taken for a) Fool
Hola. Alrighty... so I do have a recipe that I'm gonna share with you all. I'm sharing it a couple weeks later than when I actually made the recipe, but the post is happening now. It's still good. And you're gonna love it. In April Fool's news: Every year I pull the same April Fool's prank on my boyfriend, and every year he falls for it. It goes like this:
Me: Yo yo boyfriend. I messed up my birth control pills. I'm pregnant.
Him: WHAT?!? AHHHH!!! What? Oh my go-
Me: Just kidding.
Him: WTF?! You almost gave me a heart attack.
Me: I pull the same shit every year. Are you really that surprised?
The end. Now who's ready for some kale? Or yams? In actuality I couldn't find sweet potatoes at my local produce store, so I had to improvise with yams. In addition sweet potatoes, yams, white beans, and kale were all really in season when I made this.
Sweet and Savory Yams Stuffed with White Beans and Kale
adapted from Simple Supper Recipe
Serves 4
4 sweet potatoes (or, in my case, Yams)
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 shallot, diced
1 garlic clove, minced
1 (4-inch) sprig fresh rosemary
1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1 can drained and washed white beans
1 shallot, diced
1 garlic clove, minced
1 (4-inch) sprig fresh rosemary
1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1 can drained and washed white beans
3 cups spinach, chopped
3 cups kale, chopped
Juice of 1/4 lemon
Salt and pepper to taste
3 cups kale, chopped
Juice of 1/4 lemon
Salt and pepper to taste
1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit.
2. Scrub the sweet potatoes (or yams), and stab them a few times with a fork. Wrap the potatoes in tin foil and place on baking sheet. Bake the potatoes until soft, about 45 minutes to an hour depending on how big the potatoes are.
3. Start cooking the greens and beans on the stove top once the potatoes are about 2/3rds of the way done.
4. Heat the olive oil over low to medium heat in a wide deep sauce pan. Add the shallots and cook for 5 minutes. Add the garlic, white beans, rosemary sprig, and red pepper flakes. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.
5. Add the kale and spinach to the pan, and cover. Cook for about 10 minutes or until the kale is soft. Remove the rosemary sprig, and stir in the lemon juice.
To serve, slice each potato lengthwise and push on both ends to create pocket for greens and beans. Season with salt and pepper.
So good. So filling. Papa John's.
...But not actually Papa John's.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Here It Comes Now
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Stolen from the Interwebs |
Although The Strokes' fifth album The Comedown Machine isn't officially released in its entirety until March 26th of this year, they have released two songs off of the album that I would love to share with you all. On a completely unrelated side note, I started thinking of what a fifth album would be called in terms of class year.... you know: first album, sophomore album, junior album, senior album.... then what? I think it should be called a "PG album" (i.e. post graduate album). Do you think that will fly? Cause when I Googled "PG album," the first searches I got were for Peter Gabriel albums. Maybe a fifth album release should just be called "Peter Gabriel albums" because he's pretty terrific.
Back to The Strokes. They are my favorite band. Not because I love every single one of their songs (believe me, there a couple dogs in there... cough Fear of Sleep...cough. Seriously, it sounds like Casablancas is piss drunk and couldn't come up with more lyrics than "fear of sleep" after a certain point), but I love the drunkenness-falsetto-rock-man-thing. Julian Casablancas wears it well under his big ole sunglasses. Secretly he works at Sunglasses Hut and gets drunk and sings with his friends... or at least that's what I dream he does. WOW. OKAY.
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Also from the internet. I only wish I was this close to them. |
So the two songs that have been released off of their new album The Comedown Machine are "All The Time" and "One Way Trigger". "All The Time" sounds like an outtake from their sophomore album Room on Fire since it has an uptempo "driving in a tour bus" vibe going on. What I've noticed about The Strokes as their sound matures is that their uptempo beats have aged as well. Even when one of their songs is fast paced, it seems that they are still going in slightly slower motion than some of the younger albums' songs. It's like listening to a radio version of a song and then listening to the original, only to realize it's supposed to be played slower. You just got so used to the version you initially heard that the slower "regular" version just sounds weird to you now. It's not a bad thing or a good thing, it's just a noticeable difference.
With both songs you hear the lads dealing with more mature issues. In "All The Time" Julian questions the stability of a relationship by singing, "Do you want what I want too? All the time in the world is all that's necessary." It's not mere coincidence that in both released songs, he battles long-term relationship woes. In "One Way Trigger" Casablancas croons in his falsetto, "Find a job, find a friend, find a home, find a dog, settle down, out of town, find a dream, shut it down" and I can't help but wonder whether he and his bandmates are getting pressured by their significant others to "shut it down." They are rock n' rollers and will do no such thing. The fact that this approach to their writing is so different from the penetration-romance genre that I initially fell in love with makes me nostalgic for the good old days. They're all older, in relationships, and contemplating their 30's. It only seems reasonable that their music should echo this. I guess this just depresses me because like romances, their albums were so exciting and unpredictable in the beginning. I only hope that the boys stick in one or two songs about going to the bathroom to poon a lady. That being said, I wait with baited breath for the rest of the album. Also, I will forever love The Strokes. The end.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Good Morning, Good Morning
Strawberry & Banana Muffins
yields 6 muffins or 12 mini-muffins
1 banana
2 eggs
1 handful of strawberries (you can also trade out strawberries for blueberries, blackberries, snozzberries, Berry Berry Kix, etc.)
1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
2. Blend banana and eggs together.
3. Put cupcake liners in tins, and fill cups up about three quarters of the way up.
4. Chop strawberries into very small pieces and distribute the berries evenly amongst the cupcake tins.
5. Bake muffins for 10-12 minutes or until the tops are just starting to turn golden brown.
Simple. Healthy. Delicious. I feel like Gordon Ramsay saying that. Good times.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Diabetes
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY! Calm down. Today we will be baking! Yay V-day! If your boyfriend is allergic to dairy like mine is, then you sit in bed next to him eating a giant block of cheese while watching Chopped. Also, you tend to bake more dairy-free things so that you're not eating all the cookies alone. In a corner. Because you're an asshole. SO. My favorite thing to make my lover is snicker doodles. They're his favorite type of cookie, and I've perfected this recipe. And it makes me happy that I know at least one recipe by heart (besides my chili). I did something slightly different by cooking them in a heart-shaped cupcake tray that I got at CVS. If you have a heart-shaped cookie cutter, then that works too.
Snicker doodles
Bitch, I did this myself. (Yields 40 cookies. I know, right?)
1 cup butter
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 eggs
2 3/4 cups flour
1 pinch baking soda
1 pinch salt
2 tablespoons cinnamon
sugar and cinnamon to roll the dough balls in before baking
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2. Mix butter, sugar, and eggs together in a mixer on low speed.
3. Mix in baking soda, salt, and cinnamon.
4. Add the flour (in small batches) to the mixing bowl. Mix all ingredients on low speed until combined.
5. Mix equal parts sugar and cinnamon in a separate bowl.
6. Shape the dough into 1-inch balls and roll them in the cinnamon-sugar mixture. Using your hands, mush the dough into the cupcake tray hearts (or just place the dough balls on a baking sheet if you're not feeling the hearts).
7. Bake for 12-15 minutes or until edges just start to turn golden brown.
You can never go wrong with butter and sugar... and cinnamon. Cinnamon is up there. Happy Valentimes!
Snicker doodles
Bitch, I did this myself. (Yields 40 cookies. I know, right?)
1 cup butter
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 eggs
2 3/4 cups flour
1 pinch baking soda
1 pinch salt
2 tablespoons cinnamon
sugar and cinnamon to roll the dough balls in before baking
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2. Mix butter, sugar, and eggs together in a mixer on low speed.
3. Mix in baking soda, salt, and cinnamon.
4. Add the flour (in small batches) to the mixing bowl. Mix all ingredients on low speed until combined.
5. Mix equal parts sugar and cinnamon in a separate bowl.
6. Shape the dough into 1-inch balls and roll them in the cinnamon-sugar mixture. Using your hands, mush the dough into the cupcake tray hearts (or just place the dough balls on a baking sheet if you're not feeling the hearts).
7. Bake for 12-15 minutes or until edges just start to turn golden brown.
You can never go wrong with butter and sugar... and cinnamon. Cinnamon is up there. Happy Valentimes!
Let's Pretend We're Healthy
Hello everyone. So I've been experimenting with kale lately... you know, making salads, stir-fries, smoothies, and chips. I'm a lot late on the whole "kale is cool" boat, but whatever. Who cares? Anyway, today I am sharing a recipe that I found while surfing the internet for a savory way to cook kale. I kind of want to try salt and vinegar kale, but that might be disgusting. Or genius. But this recipe is pretty good. You might have to season the bejesus out of the kale in order to achieve the taste you want, but here you go.
Barbecue Kale Chips
adapted from The Food Network
1 bunch kale (washed and dried thoroughly)
olive oil
1/4 cup paprika
2 tablespoons chile powder
1 tablespoon garlic powder
1 tablespoon salt
1 teaspoon pepper
1/2 teaspoon dry mustard
1. Preheat the oven to 275 degrees.
2. Remove kale leaves from stem and tear the leaves into big bite-size pieces (the kale will shrink a little as it cooks in the oven).
3. Toss kale in a bowl with olive oil so each piece gets an even coat.
4. Lie the kale out on a baking sheet and bake for 20-25 minutes, tossing the kale halfway through. Kale is done when it is crispy and browned on the edges.
5. Mix the paprika, chile powder, garlic powder, salt, pepper, and dry mustard together in a bowl to create BBQ seasoning.
6. Sprinkle (or in my case pour on) the barbecue seasoning, and toss kale in a bowl.
Now curl up on your couch with those kale chips and read that book that you haven't read, but your mom gave it to you.
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Pardon The Hiatus
Well hello again. Although it has been almost 9 months since I last posted, we're going to ignore that and continue as usual. I'm sure you're so glad I'm back! Really I just missed talking about recipes and finding eco-friendly ways to document new ones. In addition, there's a lot of new music coming out. Like. A LOT. Also, this is in existence:
So happy day to that.
Now that that's over, I've made something for you all. So gather around the kitchen counter, and watch Chef Lindsay amaze you with the culinary arts.
A recipe that is great and delicious (and easy to make) that I found recently comes from a blogger who I heavily enjoy. She makes beautiful food and she's got a great sense of humor. So I changed a couple things in the recipe, but it's still healthy and filling and doesn't taste like it would be. It's some good shit.
Off we go!
Vegan Butternut Squash & Curry Soup
1 small-medium butternut squash, peeled and chopped
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 yellow onion, chopped
5 cups vegetable broth
2 tablespoons powdered ginger (or freshly grated if you've got it)
2 tablespoons curry powder
2 teaspoons sugar
cinnamon
salt and pepper
Warm olive oil, salt, and pepper in a large pot over medium heat. Add onion, and cook until translucent, stirring occasionally.
Add squash, ginger, curry, sugar, a dash of cinnamon, and 4 cups of vegetable broth to the pot. Mix together, and turn the heat up to high. Once boiling, bring the temperature back to medium to low heat. Cover and let simmer for 30 minutes or until squash is cooked through. Remove from heat, and allow it to cool slightly.
Working in batches, puree soup in a blender until smooth and creamy. Once blended, return the soup to the pot and add the remaining 1 cup of vegetable broth. Stir to incorporate, while reheating the soup.
Ladle the soup into bowls and garnish with a sprinkle of cinnamon, paprika, and pepper.
In the words of Julia Child, "Bon Appétit!"
Also, I'll catch you guys soon. My belated New Year's Resolution is to be more diligent in my writing.
Beaucoup de bisous!
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A jubilous Thom Yorke |
So happy day to that.
Now that that's over, I've made something for you all. So gather around the kitchen counter, and watch Chef Lindsay amaze you with the culinary arts.
A recipe that is great and delicious (and easy to make) that I found recently comes from a blogger who I heavily enjoy. She makes beautiful food and she's got a great sense of humor. So I changed a couple things in the recipe, but it's still healthy and filling and doesn't taste like it would be. It's some good shit.
Off we go!
It's like Halloween... |
Vegan Butternut Squash & Curry Soup
1 small-medium butternut squash, peeled and chopped
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 yellow onion, chopped
5 cups vegetable broth
2 tablespoons powdered ginger (or freshly grated if you've got it)
2 tablespoons curry powder
2 teaspoons sugar
cinnamon
salt and pepper
It's a butthole... |
Warm olive oil, salt, and pepper in a large pot over medium heat. Add onion, and cook until translucent, stirring occasionally.
Add squash, ginger, curry, sugar, a dash of cinnamon, and 4 cups of vegetable broth to the pot. Mix together, and turn the heat up to high. Once boiling, bring the temperature back to medium to low heat. Cover and let simmer for 30 minutes or until squash is cooked through. Remove from heat, and allow it to cool slightly.
Working in batches, puree soup in a blender until smooth and creamy. Once blended, return the soup to the pot and add the remaining 1 cup of vegetable broth. Stir to incorporate, while reheating the soup.
Ladle the soup into bowls and garnish with a sprinkle of cinnamon, paprika, and pepper.
In the words of Julia Child, "Bon Appétit!"
Also, I'll catch you guys soon. My belated New Year's Resolution is to be more diligent in my writing.
Beaucoup de bisous!
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Red-y for Summer
Ah, yes. It has been over a month since my last post. I almost forgot I decided to do a blog. Oops. Oh well. I'm back. I know you've missed this. Anyway, let's get on with it.

Red Curry Recipe
adapted from Thai Kitchen
1 tbsp olive oil
1 can (14 oz.) coconut milk
2 tbsp red curry paste
1 tbsp brown sugar
1 lb chicken breast
1 cup (or more if you're feeling super healthy) assorted vegetables
1/4 cup fresh basil leaves
2 tbsp fish sauce
1. Put the olive oil in a wok or large skillet over medium heat. Cut the chicken into strips or small chunks. Once the oil is hot enough (when you flick water into the oil and it sizzles) place chicken in pan and cover. Cook chicken for 7-9 minutes on each side, or until mostly cooked through. Set chicken aside.
2. Cut up assorted vegetables into large bite-size pieces and place in skillet. Cover, and cook vegetables for 7-9 minutes. Set vegetables aside, and dispose of leftover oil.
3. Bring coconut milk to simmer in large skillet (or wok) on medium heat. Stir in curry paste and sugar until well blended; bring to boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer for about 5 minutes.
4. Stir in chicken and vegetables. Cover, and cook for 15-20 minutes. Stir in basil leaves and fish sauce.
5. Serve with rice (Jasmin or long grain white rice). Garnish with additional basil, and add Sriracha for heat (if so desired... I always desire it).
Although I realize this recipe is the opposite of summer since it's curry, this recipe is so darn easy and delicious to make that you won't really care. As long as you have an air-conditioner unit or a fan blowing, you'll be able to enjoy this curry sans heat exhaustion. The difference between my curry and the Thai Kitchen recipe is that I enjoy using red, orange, and yellow peppers as the "assorted vegetables." Also, you don't need to cook the whole dish for 15-20 minutes, I just like the chicken and veggies to soak up all the coconut milky flavor and turn into kind of a curry stew. The longer you keep the dish simmering, the richer the flavors will become, and the more tender the chicken. This dish reminds me of the shining sun in the summertime. Now that it's hot out, we can all enjoy the delightful weather and the NYC garbage smell emanating from the sidewalks.
Happy (almost) summer everyone. Here's to the last summer before the world ends... apparently.
Red Curry Recipe
adapted from Thai Kitchen
1 tbsp olive oil
1 can (14 oz.) coconut milk
2 tbsp red curry paste
1 tbsp brown sugar
1 lb chicken breast
1 cup (or more if you're feeling super healthy) assorted vegetables
1/4 cup fresh basil leaves
2 tbsp fish sauce
1. Put the olive oil in a wok or large skillet over medium heat. Cut the chicken into strips or small chunks. Once the oil is hot enough (when you flick water into the oil and it sizzles) place chicken in pan and cover. Cook chicken for 7-9 minutes on each side, or until mostly cooked through. Set chicken aside.
2. Cut up assorted vegetables into large bite-size pieces and place in skillet. Cover, and cook vegetables for 7-9 minutes. Set vegetables aside, and dispose of leftover oil.
3. Bring coconut milk to simmer in large skillet (or wok) on medium heat. Stir in curry paste and sugar until well blended; bring to boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer for about 5 minutes.
4. Stir in chicken and vegetables. Cover, and cook for 15-20 minutes. Stir in basil leaves and fish sauce.
5. Serve with rice (Jasmin or long grain white rice). Garnish with additional basil, and add Sriracha for heat (if so desired... I always desire it).
Although I realize this recipe is the opposite of summer since it's curry, this recipe is so darn easy and delicious to make that you won't really care. As long as you have an air-conditioner unit or a fan blowing, you'll be able to enjoy this curry sans heat exhaustion. The difference between my curry and the Thai Kitchen recipe is that I enjoy using red, orange, and yellow peppers as the "assorted vegetables." Also, you don't need to cook the whole dish for 15-20 minutes, I just like the chicken and veggies to soak up all the coconut milky flavor and turn into kind of a curry stew. The longer you keep the dish simmering, the richer the flavors will become, and the more tender the chicken. This dish reminds me of the shining sun in the summertime. Now that it's hot out, we can all enjoy the delightful weather and the NYC garbage smell emanating from the sidewalks.
Happy (almost) summer everyone. Here's to the last summer before the world ends... apparently.
Monday, April 9, 2012
Easter meets Passover... meets Good Friday
Happy Monday to you all... this means the fresh start of a new week. Sunday doesn't count. You can now accomplish new things this week, folks... and all because it's Monday. Anyway, I contemplated making eggs in some creative fashion as a nod to both Easter and Passover (Seder plate) and then putting it up on my blog, but then I thought maybe I should do something I haven't done in awhile: post an outfit. After all, this is a multifaceted blog. Yes... I should explore my horizons and whatnot. I promise I'll still cook things and post pictures of delicious food finds, my devoted readers (all 6 of you). For today, I wanted to put up a picture of an outfit that is a nod to "mid-western meets ballet"... or (in this case) "Easter meets Passover.... meets Good Friday"...what? These holidays have passed, you say? Well, good riddance. Sometimes I confuse Good Friday with Ash Wednesday, but then I realized that I didn't see anyone on Friday who looked like they fell asleep in a fireplace.
On that note...
On that note, I'm off to Pinkberry. May you never confuse one holiday for another, therefore offending a religion.
On that note...
On that note, I'm off to Pinkberry. May you never confuse one holiday for another, therefore offending a religion.
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Oh, you fancy huh?
Hello there! So, this will be kind of a short one because I made a promise to myself to go to sleep before 1 o'clocky tonight. And I took a sleeping pill, so hopefully this recipe remains more coherent than the St. Patty's Day one. All right!
Goat Cheese and Arugula Pizza with Caramelized Onions
1 (8 oz.) package of goat cheese
2 small handfuls arugula (also known as "rocket")
1/2 red onion (roughly chopped)
3-4 basil leaves
olive oil
1 pizza crust (or you can make your own if you're not lazy)
pepper
1. Preheat the oven to the temperature your pizza crust package tells you to turn it to. Mine said 425 degrees.
2. Put the oil and onions in a medium skillet and cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until onions are soft and caramelized, about 7-10 minutes.
3. Put pizza crust on a pizza pan or baking sheet, and lightly brush the edges of the pizza crust with olive oil.
4. Sprinkle goat cheese all around pizza, but leave about an inch to an inch and a half uncheesed around the edges. Then sprinkle the arugula (rocket), basil leaves, and caramelized onions all over the pizza. Crank some pepper on that puppy.
5. Bake the pizza for about 8-10 minutes (or whatever the pizza crust package tells you) and enjoy!
This is so effortlessly, deliciously awesome. And it's so easy to make. And it's really not too unhealthy for you... as long as you're sharing. Goodnight you princes of Maine, you kings of New England.
Goat Cheese and Arugula Pizza with Caramelized Onions
1 (8 oz.) package of goat cheese
2 small handfuls arugula (also known as "rocket")
1/2 red onion (roughly chopped)
3-4 basil leaves
olive oil
1 pizza crust (or you can make your own if you're not lazy)
pepper
2. Put the oil and onions in a medium skillet and cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until onions are soft and caramelized, about 7-10 minutes.
3. Put pizza crust on a pizza pan or baking sheet, and lightly brush the edges of the pizza crust with olive oil.
4. Sprinkle goat cheese all around pizza, but leave about an inch to an inch and a half uncheesed around the edges. Then sprinkle the arugula (rocket), basil leaves, and caramelized onions all over the pizza. Crank some pepper on that puppy.
5. Bake the pizza for about 8-10 minutes (or whatever the pizza crust package tells you) and enjoy!
This is so effortlessly, deliciously awesome. And it's so easy to make. And it's really not too unhealthy for you... as long as you're sharing. Goodnight you princes of Maine, you kings of New England.
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