Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Salad Dressings

As a kid, my palette was very sensitive.  I hated salad dressing, and loved salad.  I still enjoy the fresh differences each morsel offers, but my taste buds have dulled.  This is a list of dressings that provide a richness to satisfy the carnivore I married, yet still let each salad ingredient shine enough for me.  All of these can be dumped in a jar and shaken or whisked in a bowl, except for My Favorite, although it might be worth a try.  I keep leftover dressing refrigerated up to a week.

My Favorite Dressing
This dressing was inspired by one I found for a pea salad by Heidi Swanson on 101 Cookbooks and takes a little more prep, but is worth it.  The original recipe, like many on the author's site, uses very high quality ingredients I just can't find at our farmer's markets or keep on hand.  I was intrigued by the creative flavors & very happy with the version I was able to achieve using what we normally have in the pantry.  In the absence of fresh green peas (which is most of the year in the Texas Panhandle) a handful of good quality frozen sweet peas thawed under cold water taste great thrown on top of a leafy green salad with this dressing.  I'd dip just about any fresh veggie or even apple slices in it.

3-4 TBS Lemon Juice (2-3 lemons juiced)
1 TBS Dry Dates (fresh or whole work & so does one fresh fig)
1 Tsp Red Chili Pepper Flakes (or one jalapeno pepper pureed)
1 TBS Dry Mint (or a few fresh leaves pureed with the pepper)

The first time I made this I didn't have any fresh ingredients except the lemon, so I soaked the dated, pepper flakes & dry mint for an hour or so while making the rest of our dinner and then milled & sieved the whole mess.  It tasted great, tangy, spicy, fresh, and yet savory without making my salad heavy with oil.  I've since used fresh ingredients and pureed it all in a blender for a thicker version.  I like both.

Ranch
1/2 Cup yogurt
1/2 Cup mayonnaise
1/2 tsp of your favorite green herb (dill or parsley work well)
1 tsp dry onion or to taste (fresh white onion, green onions, leeks, or shallots are great too)
1Tbs vinegar (cider or white)
1Tbs olive oil or milk
1/4 tsp salt & pepper to taste (less if your mayo is salty)

Tahini Goddess Style Dressing
1/2 Cup Tahini
1/4 Cup Olive Oil
1 TBS Cider Vinegar
Juice of one Lemon
1 TBS Tamari Soy Sauce (any soy sauce will do)
2 Cloves Crushed Garlic
1 Tsp dried onion (or fresh onion to taste, green are best)
Water to thin*Tahini & Lemon form a paste, so a couple tsp of water will make the dressing incorporate & pour well.

This dressing goes particularly well with any green salad, but also pairs particularly well with avocados, potatoes, cucumbers & carrots.

Italian Vinegrette
1/3 Vinegar (Balsamic or Wine)
2/3 Olive Oil (sometimes I go a little light on this and add 1/2 & 1/2 with a little water)
1 tsp each: Basil, Oregano, Thyme
1/8 tsp each dill, rosemary or parsley, chili pepper, black pepper & salt

Miso Paprika Dressing
This dressing is divine over spinach, and has a bright red orange color.  I found the original recipe on a blog by, Susan Voisin with the sole intent of finding a way to use more miso in our diet & stumbled across this delicious combination.

1 TBS Miso
1 TBS Mayonnaise (or substitute olive oil)
3 TBS Lemon Juice (about 2 lemons juiced or use 1 lemon and 1 TBS of balsamic vinegar)
1 Clove Crushed Garlic
1/2 TBS Paprika (Smoked Paprika or Hungarian)
















 













Brownies Made with Black Beans

A few years ago, when bacon started showing up in desserts, I got a little jealous of those who could attempt these amazing savory and sweet culinary feats.  My retaliation?  A really lumpy pan of cocoa, oats, and black beans that resembled a flat lava cake. I gave up on this combination for couple years and rumors about really good black bean brownies began to surface.  Ones that could fool the most savvy of bake sale shoppers!  This coincided with my daughter's refusal to eat beans of any kind.  My vegetarian daughter was refusing to eat beans.  I said I would never lie to my children, but then Santa Claus happened, and so sneaking some beans into dessert didn't seem like such a horrid offense.  I did some searching and was led to Chocolate Covered Katie.  The recipe below is a combination of her recipe and everything I didn't do the first time I tried to make black bean brownies.  Score!  This recipe results in a cake textured brownie and best of all, my daughter eats them. 

Favorite Black Bean Brownies

1/2 Cup Quick or Rolled Oats
2 Cups Black Beans (Canned or Cooked, Drained)
2-3 TBS Cocoa Powder (3 if you prefer dark chocolate to milk chocolate)
1/4 tsp Sea Salt
1/3 Cup Agave Nectar (I have substituted dry sweeteners in a pinch, just reduced it to taste)
1/4 Cup Oil (I like olive oil, but coconut works well, and so does just plain vegetable oil)
1 TBS Vanilla Extract
1/2 tsp baking powder
 1 Egg (you can use a flax egg or increase your baking powder to 1 tsp and add an additional TBS oil)

Optional: a handful of your favorite chocolate bar/chips, coconut, walnuts, or dried cranberries.

*A Flax Egg substitute is 3 TBS of water and 1 TBS of flax meal whisked well (or shaken in a jar) cooled in freezer (if you rush like me) for a couple minutes. 

*This recipe is wheat free & can be gluten free with the appropriate choice in oats.  For a grain free option, almond flour works, but baking powder & vanilla extract often contain grain additives as well.  When possible I do use full vanilla beans instead of extract. 

Pre-Heat Oven to 350 F & grease an 8" square or round pan.  Food process your oats until they are a fine flour (a minute or so).  Add the Black Beans and continue to food process until they have a completely smooth consistency.  This should take at least 2 entire minutes.  Use your stove timer if you are impatient like me.  If you want to use a flax egg, use the processing time to make one. Add the rest of the ingredients to the food processor and pulse until completely consistent (this shouldn't take more than a few seconds).  Dump into your pan and bake for 15-20 minutes on the top rack of your oven.  A toothpick inserted in the middle should come out clean when it is finished baking. 

*I have not had good results doubling this recipe and baking in a 9x13" pan, plus I can't fit a double batch in my food processor.