Vegetarian and queer. Just what it says on the package. Updated every few days with vegetarian recipes, reviews of LGBTQ films and books, and random musings about life, queer and otherwise.
Saturday, 28 September 2013
Vegan Banana Pancakes
These are so fast and easy to make, and very yummy too.
Ingredients:
200 g flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
½ tsp salt
2 tbsp sugar (or agave or maple syrup)
1 tbsp cinnamon
1 tsp vanilla
2 bananas
220 ml rice milk (soya or almond would be fine too)
oil
agave or maple syrup
Instructions:
1. Mix all the dry ingredients together.
2. Mash the bananas and add them in, then pour in the milk. Blend well.
3. Warm the oil in the pan, then cook a few tablespoonfuls at a time over medium heat, flipping so that both sides get golden.
4. Serve with agave or maple syrup.
Monday, 23 September 2013
Hummus
Maybe it’s the heat, but lately I’ve been feeling like minimal cooking, so I’ve been making lots of spreads. The latest was hummus.
Ingredients:
1 tin chickpeas (about 400 g)
2 cloves of garlic (or more, if you prefer)
3-4 tbsp tahini
juice from 1 lemon (or 2-3 tbsp lemon juice)
5-6 tbsp olive oil (use more for a looser, smoother spread, or less for a stickier spread)
1-2 tbsp fresh parsley
spices (I use cinnamon and smoked sweet paprika, but cumin is also common)
salt and pepper to taste
Instructions:
1. Drain the chickpeas and rinse well.
2. Blend all the ingredients except the salt and pepper in a food processor. Then season to taste.
3. Serve with vegetables or pita bread.
Wednesday, 18 September 2013
Olive Tapenade
We were at a reception where olive tapenade was served on little pieces of baguette and a couple of weeks later, I found myself craving it. So this is what we made. It was delicious on crisp rolls or on focaccia.
Ingredients:
2 cloves of garlic (more if you like it stronger)
1 tin of black olives (about 1¼ cups) (you can also mix in green olives)
1-2 tbsp lemon juice
2-3 tbsp olive oil
sea salt and black pepper to taste
Instructions:
1. Mix all the ingredients together in a food processor until the tapenade is your desired consistency (I like it pretty smooth, with some chunks).
2. Season, then serve.
Friday, 13 September 2013
Sunday, 8 September 2013
Apple and Vegetable Pie
I’d read a recipe that
suggested making a mash out of apples instead of potatoes to use as a crust for
a vegetable pie. M thought that sounded interesting but long-winded, so we
decided to make a vegetable pie that included apples instead.
We used our typical
vegan shortcrust pastry to make a nice pastry bottom and lid for the pie.
Ingredients:
200 g flour
110 g Cookeen (or
margarine or butter)
1 tsp salt
2-4 tbsp cold water
1 onion
olive oil, plus a
little extra to grease the pan
2 Bramley apples
1 parsnip
1 carrot
1 baking potato
1 stock cube
100-200 ml water
1 tbsp tomato puree
herbs (rosemary, mint,
parsley, for example)
Instructions:
1. Make the pastry by
mixing the flour, fat, salt, and cold water together. Set in the fridge while
you make the rest.
2. Peel and dice the
onion. Fry it lightly in olive oil.
3. Peel and dice the
parsnip, carrot, and potato. Add them and the stock cube to the pot and cook
for a few minutes.
4. Add the water,
cover, and let cook for 10-15 minutes.
5. Uncover and let the
water cook away (this takes another 10 minutes).
6. Mix in the tomato
puree and herbs.
7. Roll out the pastry
and put it in a lightly greased oven-safe dish. Fill with the vegetables and
fold the pastry over it, so there is a lid. Crimp the edges.
8. Cook at 200 C for
20-30 minutes.
Tuesday, 3 September 2013
400th Post
In the few years I’ve
been keeping this blog, I’ve posted 400 times, amounting to around 76,000
words. Most of those posts have been recipes, so I’m impressed that I’ve made
so many different dishes in just about three years (plus there were many I didn’t
post, obviously). I’m also really grateful to my beloved wife, M, for being my
taste-tester through all these posts!
Thanks for reading,
too!
Thursday, 29 August 2013
Welsh Cakes
I used to live in
Wales and going to the market to buy warm Welsh cakes was a treat. I’ve since
learned that they probably use lard, so I won’t be going back any time soon,
but I can make them at home myself.
You can serve them
with jam or honey, if you prefer.
Ingredients:
110 g flour
40 g sugar, plus extra
for sprinkling (or use icing sugar to sprinkle)
½-1 tsp baking powder
½ tsp cinnamon (or
mixed spice)
50 g butter or
margarine, plus extra for frying
35 g raisins or
sultanas
1 egg
1 dash milk, if needed
Instructions:
1. Mix the flour,
sugar, baking powder, and cinnamon together.
2. Cube the butter or
margarine and add it, mixing with your hands until well blended (or put it in a
food processor).
3. Add the raisins and
egg.
4. Roll out the dough
and cut into rounds.
5. Heat the extra
butter or margarine in a heavy pan and cook the cakes for 2-4 minutes on each
side.
6. Sprinkle with sugar
and serve.
Saturday, 24 August 2013
Weekend
Why are films
featuring gay men often better than those featuring gay women? That’s something
I’ve wondered as I’ve seen bad lesbian film after bad lesbian film. If it’s got
a teacher-student plot, it’s probably a (bad) lesbian movie. If one character
abuses her position of power to seduce the other, it’s probably a (bad) lesbian
movie.
I was thus excited by
Weekend. It’s about a guy called Russ who has a one-night stand that turns into
something more. I loved how the film was intense and sweet, and it really
portrayed that early-relationship awkwardness. I also liked that the film was
romantic but not overly so, and it didn’t have the expected ending.
The one thing that I
didn’t like was the sheer amount of drugs and alcohol in the film. Maybe it’s
realistic to the gay scene and the twenty-something age group, but I felt that
the two men could have had the same experiences with just a bit less alcohol
and cocaine running through them.
I wish there’d be more
lesbian films like this, with strong, believable, likeable characters, and an
interesting storyline. Until then, I’m going to have to keep watching films
like Weekend, and I’ll keep an eye out for its director, Andrew Haigh, and
leading actors, Tom Cullen and Chris New.
Monday, 19 August 2013
Delicious White Bread
This was definitely
the best white bread I’ve made, so now I keep making it. M prefers white bread
to wholemeal (I’m the opposite) so I make it often.
Ingredients:
450 g strong white
flour
2 tsp yeast
1 tsp salt
1-2 tbsp honey or
maple syrup
2 tbsp oil
300 ml warm water
Instructions:
1. Mix all the dry
ingredients together, then add in the honey, oil, and water. Mix with a bread
hook in a stand mixer or else knead on a floured surface. We mixed it in the
mixer and then M kneaded it too.
2. Leave to rise in a
warm place for about an hour.
3. Knead again and
either prove a second time or bake.
4. Bake for about
20-25 minutes at 200 C.
Wednesday, 14 August 2013
On Travel
I really like to
travel, even just short weekend trips around the UK. I always email B&Bs in
advance to say that I’m a vegetarian and that M can’t eat dairy or soya and to
make sure that that’s not a problem.
Many places are
accommodating, asking what they can have on hand instead and so on. But some
places behave really oddly, saying they can’t help or telling us to bring our
own items. I’m not sure how hard it really is for B&B-owners to go buy a
carton of rice milk, but the attitude of not being willing to even try really
puts me off. One B&B emailed me, in response to my inquiry, “It’s £85 per
night. Bring your own drinks/spreads.” For £85 a night, I think you can buy
some oat milk, no?
One place said it
would be fine to accommodate the vegetarian diet but when we got there, all
they had was an English breakfast for me, minus the bacon and sausage. In other
words, they hadn’t even attempted to get vegetarian sausages or a potato
croquette or anything. There was just a lack of thought (then again, this place
also didn’t seem to see the point in putting toilet paper in the bathroom, so
their carelessness was endemic).
Vegetarianism is so
common today, as is having food allergies/intolerances, so I don’t have a lot
of sympathy for people in the hotel trade who act as though I’m putting them
out. I always give them advance notice and, frankly, for the cost of a room at
a nice B&B, I think they should try to please the customer.
Friday, 9 August 2013
Bloomington
God, yet another film
with a predatory lesbian teacher who seduces a student. I don’t understand why
people keep making these films. Is it is because lesbians are seen as
predatory? Is there really a plethora of women who were seduced by their
teachers/bosses/other people in a role of power? Is this kind of story what
appeals to (male) viewers?
Also, why is it that
so many lesbians were “created” because of absent parents or bad relationships
with their parents? That’s another part of this film.
There isn’t a lot I
can say about this film other than that the script was ridiculous and the
acting was nothing special. I’m really sick of these stories and really would
love to see a lesbian filmmaker make something unusual and interesting.
Sunday, 4 August 2013
Spring Risotto
Risotto is actually
very quick and easy to make, though people often think it is a lot of bother.
Though it traditionally has cheese in it (usually parmesan), I make it vegan
now for M, and it is still delicious.
I call this spring
risotto because of the bright green veg I use.
Ingredients:
1 onion
2 garlic cloves
olive oil
1 tsp sugar
1 vegetable stock cube
150 g arborio rice
500 ml water
150 g vegetables (I
used a combination of peas, asparagus, and dwarf beans)
1-3 tsp mint
Instructions:
1. Chop the onion and
garlic and fry in oil in a big pot. Add the sugar after a few moments.
2. Add the stock cube
and break it up. Add the rice and stir, so it gets coated by the oil and onion
and garlic. After a couple of minutes, add some of the water and cover the pot.
Let it cook for 10 or so minutes, adding more water as necessary, stirring occasionally.
3. Add any frozen
vegetables you are using (such as peas or broad beans) and some more water and
cook for another 5-10 minutes.
4. Meanwhile, wash and
chop the fresh vegetables. Add them, the mint, and some more water and cook for
another 5-10 minutes.
5. Top with a dash of
olive oil and serve.
Wednesday, 31 July 2013
Vegan Almond Cookies
I had a craving for
cookies late one evening, so I cruised the internet for some vegan recipes. A
little tweaking and I came up with this. It was so good I ate a lot of the
dough before baking it.
It was so good we made
it twice in one week and discovered that it is fantastic with some chocolate
chips or pine nuts mixed in too.
Ingredients:
¾ cup coconut oil or
sunflower oil
1 cup ground almonds
(or another nut, if preferred)
2 1/3 cups flour
½ - ¾ cup sugar,
depending on desired sweetness
1 tbsp vanilla
¼ cup water
¼ cup or about 50 g
pine nuts or chopped hazelnuts or chopped chocolate, optional
icing sugar
Instructions:
1. If using coconut
oil, melt it.
2. Mix the coconut oil
with all the other ingredients, except the icing sugar.
3. Roll the dough into
flat rounds.
4. Bake at 175 C for
15-18 minutes.
5. Sprinkle with icing
sugar.
Friday, 26 July 2013
Chickpeas, Corn, and Spinach in a Coconut Sauce
This can be varied
easily, depending on what legumes or vegetables you have at home. Have it over
rice or with potatoes or sweet potatoes.
Ingredients:
oil
2 cloves garlic
2 tsp ginger
1 tsp cilantro
1 tin chickpeas
1 tin coconut milk
1 tin corn
400 g spinach
1 tsp lemon juice
1 tsp cinnamon
dried chilli peppers,
to taste
Instructions:
1. Warm the oil in a
sauce pan. Chop the garlic, ginger, and cilantro and add to the oil.
2. Rinse and drain the
chickpeas and cook them in the garlic mixture for 2-5 minutes, stirring now and
then.
3. Add the coconut
milk and the other vegetables and cook for 5-10 minutes, until the spinach is
wilted and everything is thoroughly warm.
4. Season with lemon
juice, cinnamon, and chilli peppers.
Sunday, 21 July 2013
Asparagus Soup
You can also use cream
(or a vegan cream, like soya or oat) for a richer flavour. I served this with
the bread I posted in the last recipe.
This was one of my
best soup recipes ever, I thought.
Ingredients:
1 tbsp olive oil
1 onion
2 cloves garlic
1 tsp maple syrup or
sugar
1 vegetable stock cube
500 g asparagus
1-2 cups water (about
300-500 ml)
½ cup milk (I used
rice milk)
Instructions:
1. Warm the oil in a
pot.
2. Peel and chop the
onion and garlic and add it to the oil. After a few minutes, add the maple
syrup or sugar and caramelise for a couple of moments, then add in the stock
cube.
3. Wash and chop the
asparagus. Add it to the pot, then stir it, so the pieces are covered with
onions.
4. Boil the water and
add about 1 cup to the pot. Cook the asparagus for about 5-10 minutes.
5. Fish out the
asparagus heads and put them in a separate bowl. Using a hand mixer, blend the
soup until smooth. Add more water and the milk until it is your desired
consistency.
6. Set it out in bowls
and top with the asparagus heads.
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