Wednesday, November 2, 2022

Sticky Pudding Carrot Pineapple Cake

This vegan sticky pudding carrot pineapple cake is aptly named for the sweet ingredients and the more-ish texture. It is divine alone or with a scoop of ice cream or a dollop of double cream. Decadent for sure. 

Food Lust People Love: This vegan sticky pudding carrot pineapple cake is aptly named for the sweet ingredients and the more-ish texture. It is divine alone or with a scoop of ice cream or a dollop of double cream. Decadent for sure.

November is World Vegan Month so I thought it would be fun to celebrate that with my Foodie Extravaganza friends. There are so many ingredients and dishes that we eat that are “accidentally” vegan that it makes me crazy when people turn their noses up if they see the label. 

If you’ve ever eaten a salad, vegan. Ditto literally every vegetable or fruit. Peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, vegan. Peanut Butter Cap’n Crunch and Life cereal, vegan. Kraft Creamy Italian Salad Dressing, Campbell’s Mushroom Gravy, Hershey’s Chocolate Syrup, vegan. Lay’s Barbecue Potato Chips, Fritos Barbecue AND Original, all vegan. You can find an ENORMOUS list with just a click. 

And that list is just some of the processed food. 

Cooking at home without including dairy, eggs and meat is super easy. I’ve found some delicious recipes searching not for vegan food but for orthodox lent recipes. Lots of Middle Eastern and Greek dishes that do not disappoint, like my bulgur stuffed peppers! So good. 

Lots of Asian recipes are also accidentally vegan as well, like my coconut chickpea new potato curry and baby eggplant curry (made in an Instant Pot - so quick!) 

Don’t get me wrong, we do eat dairy and meat and eggs but it’s healthier for us and for the planet to try to add meals without them to our menu as well. So that’s always a goal. 

Vegan Sticky Pudding Carrot Pineapple Cake

In the case of this delicious sticky cake recipe, the only substitution required is an alternative “milk.” I did a quick search and most people in my non-judgy vegan Facebook group (they like you wherever you are on the curve of trying to eat more plant-based food) agreed that, for baking, soy milk was best, so that’s what I used. This recipe is adapted from one on Nora Cooks

Ingredients
1 lb or 450g peeled carrots
2 1/2 cups or 312g all purpose flour, plus extra for the Bundt pan
1 cup, firmly packed, or 200g brown sugar
1 cup or 200g white sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 cup or 120ml canola oil, plus extra for the Bundt pan
1 cup or 245g crushed pineapple
3/4 cup or 180ml plant-based milk
1 tablespoon vanilla extract

Method
Preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C and prepare your 10-cup Bundt pan by brushing it liberally with oil then coating it with flour. Do not skip this step! Mine stuck on one side, despite my amply preparations. 

Note: I considered afterward that if I baked the cake in a normal pan instead of a Bundt one it might have turned out less puddingy but I have no regrets. My multiple taste testers loved it and that's good enough for me. 

Grate your peeled carrots finely. 


In a large bowl, add all the dry ingredients then whisk well. 


Pour in the canola oil, crushed pineapple, milk and vanilla and fold until just combined with a spatula. 


There may still be a little flour showing and that’s just fine. 


Now fold in the grated carrots. Do not over mix the batter. 


Pour the cake batter into the prepared Bundt pan.


Bake for 55-60 minutes, or until a wooden skewer comes out clean from the middle. Put foil over the top if it browns too much before it’s cooked through. 

Remove from the oven and place on a wire rack to cool. 


Allow to cool for about 20 minutes before loosening the edges and carefully inverting the pan onto the wire rack. I’m not kidding about how sticky it is. If some sticks to the pan, remove it carefully and stick it back on the cake. 

Yeah, that's what going on on the far side. It's not pretty but it's tasty. 

Food Lust People Love: This vegan sticky pudding carrot pineapple cake is aptly named for the sweet ingredients and the more-ish texture. It is divine alone or with a scoop of ice cream or a dollop of double cream. Decadent for sure.

Once cooled completely, slice to serve.  

Food Lust People Love: This vegan sticky pudding carrot pineapple cake is aptly named for the sweet ingredients and the more-ish texture. It is divine alone or with a scoop of ice cream or a dollop of double cream. Decadent for sure.

Enjoy! 

As I mentioned above, it’s time for my Foodie Extravaganza friends to share their recipes, in honor of World Vegan Month. Check out the links below.


Foodie Extravaganza is where we celebrate obscure food holidays by cooking and baking together with the same ingredient or theme each month. Posting day is always the first Wednesday of each month. If you are a blogger and would like to join our group and blog along with us, come join our Facebook page Foodie Extravaganza. We would love to have you! If you're a spectator looking for delicious tid-bits check out our Foodie Extravaganza Pinterest Board.


Pin this Vegan Sticky Pudding
Carrot Pineapple Cake! 

Food Lust People Love: This vegan sticky pudding carrot pineapple cake is aptly named for the sweet ingredients and the more-ish texture. It is divine alone or with a scoop of ice cream or a dollop of double cream. Decadent for sure.

 .

Monday, October 31, 2022

Small Batch Banana Walnut Muffins #MuffinMonday

These small batch banana walnut muffins are perfect for breakfast or snack time, full of sweet banana flavor and crunch from the nuts. Serve them with a cup of hot tea or a glass of cold milk!

Food Lust People Love: These small batch banana walnut muffins are perfect for breakfast or snack time, full of sweet banana flavor and crunch from the nuts. Serve them with a cup of hot tea or a glass of cold milk!

It’s the last Monday of the month so it’s time for Muffin Monday! Also, happy Halloween! I’m not going to suggest you hand out muffins because kids want candy, but muffins would be good for snacking on while you hand over the sweet stuff. 

Make sure to scroll down to see the other muffin recipes my friends are sharing today. 

Small Batch Banana Walnut Muffins

This recipe is adapted from one on One Dish Kitchen. I have a feeling that my bananas must be larger than hers because I could easily have stretched the batter out to another muffin or even two. As it was, a couple of mine spilled over while baking. I’ve amended the ingredient list to say “medium” bananas. Perhaps that will help. I will say, we loved the muffins and I would make them again! 

Ingredients
2 overripe medium bananas
6 tablespoons or 85g butter, melted and cooled, plus extra for the pan
1 large egg
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup or 125g flour
½ cup or 100g sugar
1 oz or 28g walnuts, chopped (about 13 shelled walnut halves) 
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon fine sea salt

Optional for decorating: 6 shelled walnut halves 
I set six aside and then forgot to put them on top before baking. Oh, well. 

Method
Preheat the oven to 350°F or 180°C and prepare your 6-cup muffin pan by buttering it or lining it with paper liners. Alternatively, you can use silicone muffin cups, as I did. 

In a large bowl, mash your bananas with a fork. 


Add in the cooled, melted butter, the egg and the vanilla extract and whisk till all are incorporated. 


Fold in the flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt, along with the chopped walnuts, until just mixed. 


You might have a little flour still showing and that’s just fine. 


Divide the batter between your prepared muffin cups. Top each with a walnut half, if desired. (Or if you remember.)


Bake in the preheated oven until a toothpick stuck in the muffins comes out clean, 20-25 minutes.


Set aside to cool on a wire rack.

Food Lust People Love: These small batch banana walnut muffins are perfect for breakfast or snack time, full of sweet banana flavor and crunch from the nuts. Serve them with a cup of hot tea or a glass of cold milk!

Enjoy! 

As I mentioned, today is Muffin Monday. Check out the recipes my fellow muffin bakers are sharing. 


#MuffinMonday is a group of muffin loving bakers who get together once a month to bake muffins. You can see all of our lovely muffins by following our Pinterest board. Updated links for all of our past events and more information about Muffin Monday can be found on our home page.

Pin these Small Batch Banana Walnut Muffins!

Food Lust People Love: These small batch banana walnut muffins are perfect for breakfast or snack time, full of sweet banana flavor and crunch from the nuts. Serve them with a cup of hot tea or a glass of cold milk!

 .

Friday, October 21, 2022

Malaysian-style Curry Laksa

This Malaysian-style curry laksa starts with a spicy paste, made soupy with water and coconut milk and loads of add-ins like shrimp, tofu, chicken and noodles. It is a rich, wonderful seafood dish for a chilly night!

Food Lust People Love: This Malaysian-style curry laksa starts with a spicy paste, made soupy with water and coconut milk and loads of add-ins like shrimp, tofu, chicken and noodles. It is a rich, wonderful seafood dish for a chilly night!

One of my favorite dishes of all time from our many, many years living in Malaysia is curry laksa. I never had to learn to make it there since there were a lot of restaurants that served lovely or at least decent versions. 

When we moved on to Egypt back in 2012, that’s when my laksa cravings meant I’d have to figure out how to make it myself. There are tons of recipes online but it took meshing a couple together to come up with one that tastes the way I remember from my favorite restaurant, Madam Kwan’s.

It has a rich, fragrant broth that tickles your nose and delights your tastebuds. 

Malaysian-style Curry Laksa

The paste is made from a long list of ingredients but don’t let that dissuade you since this recipe makes plenty enough to freeze and you will be glad to have those little bags readily available next time the craving for curry laksa hits you. You need 3 1/2 oz or 100g paste (a rounded 1/3 cup) to serve curry laksa for four people. These ingredients are available at most Asian markets.

Ingredients
For the laksa paste (rempah):
15 dried chilies, soaked in hot water (about 1/2 oz or 15g before soaking)
1/4 cup or 25g dried shrimp, pounded to powder
7 lemongrass stalks, white parts only, sliced
30 small shallots, peeled and chopped (about 6 1/3 oz or 180g)
2.8 oz or 80g galangal, peeled and sliced 
2.8 oz or 80g fresh ginger, peeled and sliced 
10 candlenuts (available at Asian markets or substitute macadamia)
1 tablespoon ground turmeric
2 tablespoons shrimp paste 
6 fresh red chilies
8 cloves garlic 
1/2 cup or 120ml canola or other light oil


For the curry laksa:
3 1/2 oz or 100g paste (a rounded 1/3 cup)
2 cups or 480ml water
1 can (113.5oz or 400ml) coconut milk 
14 oz or  400g fresh yellow egg noodles or thick rice vermicelli (or a combo)
1.75oz or 150g bean sprouts, blanched (throw them in at the very end of the noodle cooking time)
7 oz or 200g raw, cleaned, peeled shrimp or prawns
7 oz or 200g fish cakes or balls
3 1/2 oz or 100g tau pok (deep fried soy bean curd puffs)

Garnish options: 
Curry leaves and/or fresh mint
Hard-boiled eggs, halved or use whole quail eggs
Shredded chicken
Sliced chili peppers

Method
First, we make the paste: Use a blender to combine all the ingredients until you have a homogeneous paste. 


Cook the paste in a heavy pan over a low heat for about 20-25 minutes or until the onion/garlic smell is not so prominent and the paste has darkened a bit. 


These ingredients make 4 cups of paste before cooking – about 2 3/4 cups or 700g after cooking – enough for about 7 batches of curry laksa for four people. Freeze the balance until needed in airtight bags, up to three months. 


To make the laksa, add the paste to a pot with the water and whisk till combined. Bring to a slow boil.

Add in the shrimp, fish cake or balls, tau pok and coconut milk. Simmer till the shrimp are cooked, just a few minutes. 


Meanwhile, cook your noodles to package instructions. To blanch the bean sprouts, throw them in right at the end of cooking time for your noodles. Drain and rinse noodles and sprouts in cold water. Dry the sprouts on a paper towel and set the noodles aside in a colander till ready to serve. 


To serve, share out the noodles and sprouts between four large bowls. Add shrimp, fish cake (or balls) and tau pok. 


Ladle hot laksa broth into the bowls. 


Garnish with curry and/or mint leaves, eggs, chicken and sliced chili peppers. 

Food Lust People Love: This Malaysian-style curry laksa starts with a spicy paste, made soupy with water and coconut milk and loads of add-ins like shrimp, tofu, chicken and noodles. It is a rich, wonderful seafood dish for a chilly night!

Enjoy! 

It's time for Fish Friday Foodies, when my blogger friends along with group organizer Wendy of A Day in the Life on the Farm share our favorite seafood recipes. This month the theme is soups and stews. Many thanks to our host, Sneha of Sneha's Recipe. Check out the links below. 


Would you like to join Fish Friday Foodies? We post and share new seafood/fish recipes on the third Friday of the month. To join our group please email Wendy at wendyklik1517 (at) gmail.com. Visit our Facebook page and Pinterest page for more wonderful fish and seafood recipe ideas.


Pin this Malaysian-Style Curry Laksa!

Food Lust People Love: This Malaysian-style curry laksa starts with a spicy paste, made soupy with water and coconut milk and loads of add-ins like shrimp, tofu, chicken and noodles. It is a rich, wonderful seafood dish for a chilly night!

 .


Sunday, October 16, 2022

Creepy Pumpkin Seed Brittle

Creepy Pumpkin Seed Brittle is a great seasonal party sweet and perfect for wrapping up to give as gifts for teachers, friends and coworkers. The crunchy pumpkin seeds toast and pop in the syrup as it cooks and caramelizes, flavoring the buttery brittle.

Food Lust People Love: Creepy Pumpkin Seed Brittle is a great seasonal party sweet and perfect for wrapping up to give as gifts for teachers, friends and coworkers. The crunchy pumpkin seeds toast and pop in the syrup as it cooks and caramelizes, flavoring the buttery brittle.

When my girls were quite young, we lived in a small oilfield town in Brazil where we were one of very few American families. Our neighborhood was just four or five blocks square, with the tiny little international school within its perimeter.

Halloween was not celebrated in Brazil, at least when we lived there, so if I wanted my daughters to experience that great American tradition as I had when I was little, it was up to me to organize it myself.

I started in early October by asking neighbors I knew to give out candy then I’d make a map of all the participating houses and pass them out at the beginning of the evening. 

Some participating houses had children so one parent would join the groups going from house to house, leaving someone at home to hand out candy. Others didn’t have kids but they got into the spirit with enthusiasm, decorating their front doors and more, to welcome the trick or treaters.

After trick or treating, everyone would come back to our house where we had decorated the backyard for a spooky Halloween party and set up a table with cupcakes, sandwiches, chips and punch. We’d bob for apples the old-fashioned way in a big basin of water, pass oranges or small balloons under chins and play other fun games. 

And, of course, the kids would sort out their candy, trading for their favorites and eating much of it in the process. It was a festival of sweetness and fun! Such a sugar rush! 

One of my favorite candies to make for a Halloween party was, and still is, peanut brittle. This week I made it seasonal, using pumpkin seeds to celebrate Halloween.

Your Halloween party guests will love it! Or make some as a gift for your favorite teacher or neighbor. Add a creepy chocolate spiderweb for decoration!

Creepy Pumpkin Seed Brittle

Like peanut brittle, pumpkin seeds brittle is simple to make but take the time ahead to butter your foil and put it in a heatproof pan before you start boiling the concoction, as per the instructions. I don't have photos of the in-between steps because there wasn't any time to stop to take a picture!

Ingredients
1 cup or 200g sugar 
1⁄2 cup or 120ml light corn syrup 
1⁄4 cup or 60ml water
1⁄2 teaspoon fine sea salt
1 1⁄4 cups or 180g raw green (hulled) pumpkin seeds (not toasted) 
2 tablespoons butter, softened, plus more for greasing the foil lined pan
1 teaspoon baking soda
1⁄3 cup or 66g semi­sweet chocolate chips for spider web ­- optional

Method
To make the pumpkin seed brittle, first line a large pan with foil and grease the foil liberally with butter. Set aside.

In a heavy pot, heat the sugar, corn syrup, water and salt over a medium heat, stirring until the sugar dissolves.

Separate out a tablespoon of the pumpkin seeds and set them aside.

Stir in the remaining pumpkin seeds.


Continue cooking, stirring frequently until the pumpkin seeds start popping and the liquid turns caramel colored.

If you use a candy thermometer, you are looking for a temperature of 300°F or 149°C. Alternatively, you can drop a small amount into very cold water. It’s ready when it separates out into hard and brittle threads.

Remove the pot from the heat and stir in the butter and soda. The syrup will froth up but just keep stirring till the butter is melted.

Pour the bubbling pumpkin syrup into your prepared pan.

Holding the pan securely, shake it from side to side and front to back, tipping it carefully this way and that so the pumpkin seed brittle spreads out. Quickly sprinkle on the reserved pumpkin seeds and leave it to cool.


To make the creepy chocolate spider web, melt the chocolate chips with a few quick zaps in a microwave or in a double boiler.

Fill a piping bag fitted with a number 3 tip with the melted chocolate. Pipe on a spider web following these instructions here.


Set the Creepy Pumpkin Seed Brittle out on your party table whole, then break it into pieces with a little hammer to serve.

Food Lust People Love: Creepy Pumpkin Seed Brittle is a great seasonal party sweet and perfect for wrapping up to give as gifts for teachers, friends and coworkers. The crunchy pumpkin seeds toast and pop in the syrup as it cooks and caramelizes, flavoring the buttery brittle.

Enjoy! 

It's Sunday FunDay and since Halloween is nigh, we are sharing Halloween party treat recipes. Many thanks to our host, Sue of Palatable Pastime and her able helper, Wendy of A Day in the Life on the Farm. Check out all the links below!


We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.
 

Pin this Creepy Pumpkin Seed Brittle!

Food Lust People Love: Creepy Pumpkin Seed Brittle is a great seasonal party sweet and perfect for wrapping up to give as gifts for teachers, friends and coworkers. The crunchy pumpkin seeds toast and pop in the syrup as it cooks and caramelizes, flavoring the buttery brittle.

 .

Sunday, October 9, 2022

Crispy Green Herb Patties

From a reportedly Viking recipe, these crispy green herb patties are full of flavor from all the herbs and, of course, from being browned in butter. They make a great vegetarian main or appetizer. 

Food Lust People Love: From a reportedly Viking recipe, these crispy green herb patties are full of flavor from all the herbs and, of course, from being browned in butter.

Today we are “cooking like Vikings,” at the behest of our Sunday FunDay host, Amy of Amy’s Cooking Adventures for Leif Erikson Day, which just happens to be today. 

I’ll be honest, aside from the fact that Leif Erikson was a Viking explorer, I didn’t know much else about him. And I had no idea that there was even a Leif Erikson Day! Turns out that it’s been on the official US calendar since 1964. You can read more about it here: https://www.wincalendar.com/Leif-Erikson-Day And even more about Explorer Erikson on History.com. Thanks to Amy, I am now much better informed!

I found this Viking recipe on a website from the Ribe Viking Center in Ribe, Denmark where archeological excavations have confirmed the presence of Vikings in the past. The original recipe title would translate to green meatballs but the description said that, of course, they were vegetarian so I changed the English name. Calling them green meatballs would just have confused people! And I hope you would agree that plain old “green balls” would have been weird. 

Crispy Green Herb Patties

I’m leaving the ingredients list intact, in case you do indeed have access to nettles, dandelion leaves, bird’s-eye grass, birch leaves and chervil. I don’t but I did find cress, chives and scallions to which I added some parsley and cilantro because they are green herbs and I already had them on hand. How much is a basketful? I have no idea but I leave you this photo of what I used. It’s a bunch of green stuff! 


The original recipe advises: If you do not make the herb patties early in the spring, you should remember to ONLY use the newest, tender shoots.

Ingredients
1 basketful of different, fresh herbs such as nettles, cress, chives, scallions, dandelion leaves, bird's-eye grass, birch leaves and chervil.
1 medium onion (mine weighed 120g)
1 large clove garlic
1 large egg
3/4 cup or 100g coarse wheat flour – I used stoneground wheat 
1/4 cup or 22g oatmeal
1-2 tablespoons milk
1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
Butter for frying

Optional for garnish: chopped chives

Method
Thoroughly wash the green herbs and discard any tough stems. Spin them in a salad spinner to dry them. If you don’t have a salad spinner, put the herbs in the middle of a towel and bring the sides together securely. Go outside and swing the towel around quickly. Works like a charm. 

Peel and roughly chop your onion and garlic. Put them in a food processor and chop finely. 


Add in the herbs, in two or three groups depending on the size of your processor.
 

Chop finely, occasionally scraping down the sides of the processor with a spatula. 


Measure the flour and oatmeal into a large mixing bowl. Add in the herb mixture and the egg. 


Stir until well combined. 

Add the milk one tablespoon at a time – you might not need it all – mixing well. 


You don’t want it to be too wet or too dry. A spoonful should hold together when you press it into a ball with your clean hands. 


Add the salt and mix well. 

Use a spoon or scoop to divide the mixture into 12-13 portions. Shape them into patties. 


Melt a couple of tablespoons of butter in a skillet. Add the patties, being careful not to crowd the pan. Remember, you will need space to turn the patties over with a spatula. 


You may need to cook them in two batches, adding more butter to the pan for the second batch. 

Cook the patties over a medium heat until they are crispy and golden on both sides. 


Serve warm. Enjoy! 

Food Lust People Love: From a reportedly Viking recipe, these crispy green herb patties are full of flavor from all the herbs and, of course, from being browned in butter.

As mentioned above, it’s Sunday FunDay and also Leif Erikson Day. Check out the Viking recipes we are sharing below. 

We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join. 


Pin these Crispy Green Herb Patties!

Food Lust People Love: From a reportedly Viking recipe, these crispy green herb patties are full of flavor from all the herbs and, of course, from being browned in butter.

 .