Archive for November, 2009

Stuffin’ Muffins!

Whoo Hoo! It’s almost Tofurky and stuffing time!

One of the things I look forward to the most is my mom’s stuffing. Although, my mom’s yams could kick your mom’s yams ass all over the place. Maybe if you’re nice, I’ll post that recipe too. Probably not though. Cause I’m greedy like that. 

Anyway, back to the stuffing. I know there are a million fancy stuffing recipes out there that have all kinds of crazy crap in them. Sage, cranberries, apple, nuts, “Stove Top”, whatever. I’ve tried them, I’ve smiled and I’ve discreetly spit them all into my napkin while the host wasn’t looking. Well, ok, maybe not all of them. I guess it’s just that once you’ve gotten used to a certain type of stuffing, the others simply can’t compete.

This recipe originally came from my grandmother Dot. All flavor aside, one thing I always disliked about her stuffing was that the outside would be crispy and the middle would always be mushy. If you didn’t get dibs on the first couple scoops, you were screwed.
  
My mom, being the Food Network’s biggest fan, swiped the adorable idea several years later to shove it into muffin cups. Hence the name “Stuffin’ Muffins” (courtesy of Rachael Ray). This left every serving perfectly crispy on the outside and super soft in the middle – thus resolving the mush problem . Plus, it saves you from having to reach over and grab your deaf uncle’s plate and yell “HOW  MUCH!?” Bonus!
So here it is. My families traditional stuffing recipe. Only this version hasn’t been stuffed up a turkey’s butt.

photo from the Food Network
Ingredients
  • 2 loaves white bread  (dried & cubed)  * you may not need to use all of the bread *
  • 2 Large onions (finely diced) 
  • 1 head of celery (sliced – remove strings with potato peeler) 
  • 1 cube non-dairy butter 
  • Vegetable Broth  
  • 2-3 Tablespoons of Bell’s Seasoning 
  • Salt & Pepper 
  • All the crazy other stuff I mentioned earlier is optional
 
  Instructions
  • Dry the bread out by spreading it out on a table or counter (if you have kitties or kids with wandering hands you might want to spread it out – whole slices – on a few cookie sheets and put it in a 200 degree oven for a bit). When the top feels dry, flip the bread over to dry out the other side. NEVER use prepared/packaged bread cubes. They taste totally different.  
  • After the bread is dry, break/tear the bread into pieces about 1 inch in size. We usually don’t use the ends; personal preference. Put bread cubes in a large bowl. 
  • Melt ‘butter’ in large stockpot. Sauté the onions and celery in the ‘butter’ until soft, approximately 5 minutes. 
  • Add Bell’s Seasoning, salt & pepper. Adding the other crap I mentioned is also optional at this point. Mix well. 
  • Scoop mixture over dried bread cubes and mix well. 
  • Put ½ of the bread cubes in a large bowl and add some celery/onion mixture to it. Add a little vegetable broth for moisture. Mix, add a little more of each, repeat. Stuffing should be wet but not soaking wet. It needs to be moist but you don’t want it too mushy. 
  • Spray muffin pan (regular or jumbo size) with non-stick spray. Fill with stuffing. The tops should be rounded so they look like cupcakes. 
  • Bake at 350 for about 25 minutes or until tops are golden brown.
I wish I had an awesome vegan gravy recipe to go with this but I’m lazy. We buy the Tofurky Giblet and Mushroom Gravy, throw it in a pan and heat it up. Back breaking, I know.
While this may not be the fanciest recipe, it will always be one of my favorite family recipes. After all, Thanksgiving isn’t only about the food, it’s about family. Oh yeah, and all the pilgrims and Indians and slaughter and stuff. But most of all, it’s about being thankful for those in your life and remembering those who are no longer with you. So eat, be thankful, and get drunk with your deaf uncle after dinner.
Happy almost Thanksgiving!
 
Gramma Dot

SF Green Festival!

You recycle, you own a hybrid and you shop at your local Farmer’s Market. You consider yourself to be a pretty “green” person, right? That’s what we thought too. Then we stepped onto the motherload of all that is “green” last weekend.

San Francisco held it’s 8th annual Green Festival. We’re not talking some small, hippy gathering either. SF Green Fest raked in an astounding 42,000 people last year in just 3 days! That’s a rather large hippy gathering if you ask me.

Green Festival is the largest sustainability event in the world and continues to grow year after year. It’s purpose is to help find solutions to help make our lives healthier—socially, economically and environmentally. Sounds awesome, yeah? Not only is the purpose cool, but with more than 125 renowned authors, leaders and educators; great how-to workshops; cutting-edge films; fun activities for kids; organic beer and wine; delicious vegetarian & vegan cuisine and diverse live music… how could anyone not want to go!? In addition to all that awesomeness, there were more than 350 eco-friendly businesses to check out. Everything from all-natural body care products and organic cotton clothing to Fair Trade gifts and items made from renewable resources.

Some of our favorite speakers included John Robbins, author of ‘Diet for a New America’, Colleen Patrick-Goudreau, author of  ‘The Joy of Vegan Baking’ and ‘The Vegan Table’, Ani Phyo, author of ‘Ani’s Raw Food Desserts’ and ‘Ani’s Raw Food Kitchen’ & Bryant Terry, author of ‘Vegan Soul Kitchen’.

We read a lot.

We spent a couple hours wandering around checking out some interesting new concepts, companies and ideas and even met some of the geniuses behind them. Some of the booths we especially dug included AK Press (cool ass books), Big Green Cart (rent and share your stuff to reduce waste), Brilliant Earth (conflict free bling), Cafe Gratitude (raw goodness located in SF), Compassionate Cooks (vegan cooking = rad), Conscious Clothing (hemp silk wedding attire!), Green Tortoise Travel (bunch of hippies on an adventure in a bus),  Greenpeace (you should know), Peace Corps (ditto), Rudolf Steiner College (which Cinnaholic’s one and only Flori attended), Theo Chocolate (the spicy cayenne one – OMG), V Dog Food (vegan puppies!), Wholesome Sweeteners (we love their sweeteners), SF Vegetarian Society (SF, Veg… what’s not to like?) & of course the lovely ladies at Veg News (also the organizers for the SF Vegan Bakesale & SF Vegan Drinks). They are all freakin’ badasses. Check the links.

Ok, so awesome speakers… check. Awesome booths to spend all our money at… check. Awesome hippies to point and giggle at…check. But what was the real reason we showed up?

#1. Our delicious treats were featured at the bookstore cafe! All 80 dozen of them. Whoo Hoo!

#2. For the amazing OH-MY-GOD-ARE-YOU-SERIOUS-VEGAN CORN DOGS!!! Truly, an orgasm for your taste buds.

There are a million things I could write about Green Fest but I would highly recommend checking it out for yourself when they come back around in April. Who knows? Maybe you’ll run into us there! Isn’t just that worth going!?

Seriously though. Vegan corn dogs.

GO.

photo credits: franko follini, luxomedia

Awesomely Moist & Seriously Delicious Vegan Blueberry Muffins!

Blueberry muffins just like mom used to make! Minus the disgusting dairy and eggs.

You know you want it.

Awesomely Moist & Seriously Delicious Vegan Blueberry Muffins
 Yields 12 jumbo muffins

Ingredients:
  • 3 1/2 cups unbleached all purpose flour
  • 3 cups cane sugar
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 cup canola oil
  • 1 3/4 cup apple sauce
  • 6 teaspoons Energy Egg Replacer
  • 8 tablespoons water (mix with Egg Replacer)
  • 1 1/2 cups of organic blueberries
Directions:
  1. Preheat oven to 350F. Line muffin tin with paper liners.
  2. In a large bowl mix together oil, water, apple sauce and sugar until well blended.
  3. In a separate bowl whisk together the egg replacer and the water until it’s foamy. Add to wet ingredients.
  4. Combine flour, baking soda, salt and cinnamon. Mix thoroughly then add to wet ingredients. Mix together until well blended and pour into prepared pans.
  5. Place 2-4 blueberries on top of each muffin to decorate.
  6. Bake for about 30-35 minutes. Muffins are done when toothpick inserted in center comes out clean.

Don’t feel like baking? Come down to SF Green Festival this weekend and try some of ours at the official festival bookstore! 


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