Kitchen / Garden / Sanctuary - Urban Homesteading to Nourish Body + Spirit

Author: Lindsey (Page 31 of 88)

Classic Tabbouleh

One of my all-time favorite foods, ever! This is my mom’s famous recipe.

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And since my diet has gone essentially low fat vegetarian, which is presently all my body will handle, this stuff is my mainstay. I plow through an entire batch all by myself every 2 or 3 days! And since I can’t eat much oil at all, I change up the dressing to be only a small drizzle of oil, and tons of lemon juice, and I’ve grown to really love it this way!

Also, tabbouleh is normally made with bulghur. I always make it with quinoa now since I love the taste of it and it’s more nutritious and also a complete protein — but bulghur is of course delicious too!

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Mom’s Tabbouleh

1/2 cup uncooked bulghur or quinoa*

1-2 cups chopped tomatoes — (2 cups = about 1 lb) (I always make it with 2 cups of tomatoes now, but if you do, you may need to increase the amounts of lemon juice and olive oil slightly)

2 cups finely chopped parsley — chop first and then measure (about 1 medium-large bunch parsley…but do measure it first)

1/2 cup chopped green onion or 1/3 cup finely chopped white onion

1 level Tbsp dried mint, crushed (or 2 Tbsp fresh mint, finely chopped)

1/4 – 1/3 cup fresh lemon juice

1/3 cup olive oil

Salt (about 1 to 1 1/2 tsp), or to taste

Pepper to taste

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Cook the 1/2 cup bulghur or quinoa* (1/2 cup grain to 1 cup boiling water + dash of salt; cover, simmer till water’s absorbed, about 20 minutes). Cool it to room temperature. If I’m in a hurry, I’ll put the hot quinoa into the freezer to cool it quickly.

Mix everything together in a big bowl. But if you don’t think you’ll eat all of it within a day or two, mix the dressing separately, and add it to the tabbouleh right before you eat a helping of it. That way the tabbouleh will stay fresh several days longer in your fridge.

Enjoy!

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*Cooking quinoa:

Be sure to rinse the quinoa well to remove bitter saponin residue. The quick way to cook it is to boil your water (ratio of 1 cup grain to scant 2 cups water), add some salt, add quinoa and cover, simmering until the water is absorbed, about 20 minutes.

However, if you’re able to plan ahead enough, it’s much better, healthwise, to soak your quinoa for at least 12 hours to make it more digestible — the way traditional cultures do. Soaking grains neutralizes phytic acid (which binds to essential minerals like calcium, magnesium, iron, and zinc, and blocks their absorption) as well as enzyme inhibitors in the grain. Soaking also breaks down difficult-to-digest proteins and encourages the production of beneficial enzymes which in turn increases the vitamin (especially B vitamin) content of the grain.

So…

To soak quinoa: Thoroughly rinse 1/2 cup of dry quinoa to remove bitter saponin residue. Put 1 Tbsp of lemon juice or vinegar into a measuring cup and fill to the 1/2 cup mark with warm water, then mix with the quinoa in a bowl. Cover and let sit at room temperature for at least 12 hours, or up to 24. When you’re ready to cook, rinse and drain the quinoa well, and place in a saucepan. Add a scant 1/2 cup of water, and a little salt. Bring to a boil and simmer, covered, until all the water is absorbed, about 20 minutes. Cool, and proceed with the recipe.

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Gratitude Sunday * April 1, 2012

~ I’m once again joining Taryn over at Wooly Moss Roots in her Gratitude Sunday tradition. ~

Gratitude Sunday is a time to slow down and remember those thankful moments that graced our week. One reason I love keeping a daily gratitude journal is because it helps keep things in perspective for me. Each Sunday, I open my journal and share some of those moments with you here. If you’d like to join in, just leave a comment!

Gratitude is powerful energy. I love hearing others’ gratitudes!

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– Such sweet comments from the wonderful people who visit my blog! THANK YOU!

– Lunch outside on a restaurant patio this week, with my Honey and a couple of his co-worker friends. That was so nice.

– Not needing to ‘live’ next to the space heater, hah! This warm weather has been wonderful.

– Discovering Mt. Vikos brand Haloumi cheese; a new obsession! (Their feta is so good too.) And equally thankful that my stomach… which is slowly healing… can handle it better than it would have a couple months ago! Yay!

– Tabbouleh, my continuing obsession. (I still need to share that recipe… [Edit: here it is: Classic Tabbouleh])

– The smell of hyacinth. One of my Top 3 Favorite Smells Ever. And even better, having a couple of stalks of it here in our kitchen; it’s so heavenly! And so ephemeral…

– Getting a difficult, nebulous (moneymaking) project completed!

– My sweet Hubby. My sweet Parents. My sweet Cat. My sweet Neighbor, Margaret. I am surrounded by such loving and wonderful people, I am just so lucky.

– How much F. makes me laugh! I love his sense of humor.

– Dreams, for making it clear when I need to back off on what I’ve got going on in my life. When I’m overwhelmed, I have scary dreams where I’m trying to escape a tornado or a tsunami, or am drowning. These three themes recur whenever I need to hear the message to “slow down.”

– Returning unread library books… one concrete step toward simplifying and de-overwhelming myself.

– Making time to just sit and journal… to think through and reflect on what’s transpired with this massive illness. Wow… lots to think about, and work out in my mind… it feels good to journal it… to process it… to integrate its many, many lessons…

– How incredibly good and normal I’ve been feeling… oh my gosh. What a blessing… I can’t even express it.

– Being barefoot in my garden.

– Being outside this weekend. I absolutely needed it.

– The quietude over at my parents’ house. At our house, there is constant, unrelenting traffic noise since we live next to a busy street. At times it drives me berserk. So to give my ears a rest feels soooooooo good.

– Getting so much awesome stuff done in my garden this weekend, with gorgeous weather to boot! I feel really really good about what I accomplished.

– Seeing so many newborn worms in my garden soil! They’re really teensy and cute.

– Doing handstands around my parents’ yard, just like old times. I was amazed that after 2 days of hot weather and hard labor in the garden, I was still energetic enough to be spending energy ‘carelessly’ on handstands! Truly amazing… (I hope Murphy doesn’t hear me saying how good I feel…)

– The smell of apple blossoms in the air as I ride my bike. What a special time of year! (They’re blooming 3 weeks early this year!)

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What have you felt especially grateful for this past week?

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In the garden this past week…

Boy it’s been a busy week! There are lots of things I’ve wanted to post for you but other things have been happening like moneymaking work, enjoying the gorgeous weather, lunch out with my Honey, visiting my mom and dad, gardening, and resting my still-healing body.

Anyway, here are some pictures of what’s happening in my garden — and also my parents’ yard, where my garden is located. Lots of stuff is popping up in the garden — turnips, lettuce, spinach, arugula, radishes, bok choi, and probably others by now, too.

Stomping leaves for the compost pile

Radishes in the Wall-o-Water

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Gratitude Sunday * March 25, 2012

~ I’m once again joining Taryn over at Wooly Moss Roots in her Gratitude Sunday tradition. ~

Gratitude Sunday is a time to slow down and remember those thankful moments that graced our week. One reason I love keeping a daily gratitude journal is because it helps keep things in perspective for me. Each Sunday, I open my journal and share some of those moments with you here. If you’d like to join in, just leave a comment!

Gratitude is powerful energy. I love hearing others’ gratitudes!

***

– The pretty weather.

– Being out in my garden, just me and the soil.

– My loved ones!!!

– Unlimited paper and pens, so that I can write as much as I want. Other eras in history may not have provided this luxury!

– Journaling to help ‘verbalize’ and make some sense of the heaviness and vague, non-specific sadness that pervaded the week. I’m starting to cogitate on this past year and am recognizing that being so gravely sick was much more… traumatic, I guess you could say, than I realized. I feel that this illness was an ‘exit point;’ I had to choose whether or not I wanted to continue to live. Finally I decided that I did. But the illness kept worsening, and there were many nights where I didn’t know if I’d still be alive in the morning — and I deeply feared that I’d made my decision too late. And when you’ve been holding things like that, and so much more, in the palm of your hand month after month… I dare say it affects you.

– Making time to do a mandala. I haven’t done one in a while; it was really satisfying.

– The wonderful scent of paperwhites while I go about my work in the kitchen!

– Cabbage and potatoes cooked in corned beef broth. So delicious!

– A spur-of-the-moment walk in a new neighborhood with my mom one beautiful day; it really helped turn the day around.

– How impossibly good food tastes when you’re starving!

– Good news, from whoever, and about whatever. Good news in general is so nice to hear, isn’t it!

– The kindest of words written to me and spoken to me this week from people I love.

– Lying outside in the sun.

– F. accomplishing a huge bike ride yesterday — and that the weather gods smiled graciously upon him. (And then laughing about how whereas most folks might pack energy bars for a snack, he packs a friggin’ steak! Hehe! I love it.)

– Surprise blossoms on the peach and plum trees that I grew from seed!

Peach blossom

A single blossom! Cute!

Plum blossoms

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What have you felt especially grateful for this past week?

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