Category: Recipes

  • Annie’s Tropical Mousse

    This light, tropical mousse makes a great side or garnish to a main course, or a wonderful dessert.

    It is very light and refreshing, and amazingly simple to make.

    Annie’s Tropical Mousse:

    3 small avocados
    1 young coconut *
    zest and meat of 1/2 lime
    small amount of agave nectar, to taste (optional)

    Place the meat of the avocados, the meat of the young coconut, and the zest and meat of the 1/2 lime into a food processor with the “S” blade (the regular chopping blade). *

    [*Here are easy directions for how to open a young coconut.]

    If you are serving this as a dessert, and want it a bit more on the sweet side, add a bit of agave nectar, to taste.

    Process everything until it is light and creamy. Spoon into bowls or onto plates, and serve.

  • The Best Way to Cut Open a Young Coconut

    As anyone who has perused raw food websites, raw food cookbooks, or raw food books for more than about 5 minutes knows. young coconuts (mostly marketed as “young Thai coconuts”) are a fantastic source of all kinds of healthful goodness, and not only are they great for you, but they taste great as well. The liquid inside them, known as “coconut water” (as compared to the thick milky stuff you get with older coconuts) is incredibly good for you, low in calories, and tastes divine.

    And the tender meat of a young coconut..only 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick, and almost like Jello in consistency. It tastes fantastic, and is the basis for all sorts of yummy recipes, both main dish and dessert (like Annie’s Tropical Mousse).

    You’ve probably seen them in the produce aisle, and maybe not even realized what they were, as they don’t look like the coconuts you are used to. That is because they are still covered with their outer fiber – the shell you are used to seeing is encased within that fiber, with the tender meat and coconut water housed within the still-thin shell.

    Usually the fiber housing has been shaped, and so the young coconut looks something like this:

    With all the great nutrition, taste, and versatility packed into one young coconut, they are a bargain at the $2.00 to $3.00 they cost.

    But opening them is nearly as difficult as opening a more mature coconut, and because they are so wonderful, you will want to do that much more frequently than you probably open mature coconuts.

    But it doesn’t have to be difficult.

    Here’s how to open them, and it’s quite simple:

    First, you need to have a nice big heavy cleaver. Not the thin-as-a-razor kind you can get in so many shops, but a big meat cleaver meant for hacking through bones – one with plenty of heft. Henckels has a fantastic one that I use, and I’ll show it to you in a bit.

    Now, put that coconut on a cutting board, on it’s side, and give it a really good whack with the cleaver, straight down into one of the slopes which leads to the point at the top of the coconut.

    Hopefully that whack broke through into the inner shell enough so that you can now turn the coconut upside down over a bowl, and let it rest and drain out all the wonderful coconut water. (If it didn’t, give it another good whack, and another if necessary, until you can drain out the water.)

    A small young coconut can contain as much as 1 1/2 cups or more of coconut water.

    Once all of the coconut water is drained out, if you have the right cleaver for the job, like my Henckels, you can turn the coconut back on its side, insert the cleaver back into the slit you made, and actually just work the cleaver down, straight across the top of the coconut, neatly slicing off the tip, and opening up the coconut straight across – it will now look like a cup (in fact many Asian restaurants do exactly this, serving a coconut-based drink in this ‘cup’).

    Inside the coconut, along the walls of the shell, you will see the tender young coconut meat. The best way to get this out is to take a rubber scraping spatula, and gently pry and scrape the meat away from the sides. Try to keep the pieces as large as possible, because lots of recipes call for cutting the meat into strips, and using it like a pasta.

    But even if you can’t extract it in larger pieces, it’s wonderful for all kinds of recipes, including my Tropical Mousse.

    This is the Henckels cleaver I have (click on the picture for full info, including pricing from Amazon):

    Henckels International Classic Stainless Steel Meat Cleaver

  • My Disgustingly Healthful Homemade Bread Machine Bread Mix

    Annie’s Disgustingly Healthful Homemade Bread Machine Bread Mix

    (Makes enough for several loaves)

    5 pounds bread flour
    5 pounds whole wheat flour minus 4 cups of the whole wheat flour
    3 cups oat flour
    1/2 cup ground flax seeds
    1/2 cup walnut meal
    2 cups date sugar
    1 cup powdered milk
    6 Tablespoons powdered egg replacer

    Mix all ingredients really well (we put it in the bottom of a big container and then use a hand-held electric mixer on it!)

    To make bread, put in your bread machine:

    3 1/2 cups bread mix
    1 1/3 cup lukewarm water
    1 1/2 teaspoons (or 1 envelope) yeast

    You can also add 1-2 Tablespoons of oil to this, although we don’t.

    Bake in bread machine using the whole wheat or whole grain setting.

    Note: You must use the whole wheat or whole grain setting or it will not rise properly

  • Garlic Almonds

    This recipe is my own, but inspired by and based on the chili almonds in “Raw Food/Real World”.

    It’s a very easy recipe!

    Take 4 cups raw, organic almonds.

    Put them in a bowl, cover them with water, and let them soak overnight (at least 10-12 hours).

    Rinse the almonds and let them drain.

    To the almonds add:

    1/4 cup agave nectar (available at health food stores and Whole Foods – use like honey, and it’s cheaper than honey!)

    1/4 cup Nama Shoyu or other soy sauce

    1 tablespoon fine garlic powder

    1 tablespoon garlic granules (the coarser stuff)

    Mix this all up very well, and divide onto two dehydrator screens covered with Teflex sheets.

    Dehydrate at 115 degrees for 3 to 4 hours (to give the sauce a chance to dry up a bit), and then turn the almonds out onto the dehydrator screen (i.e. remove the Teflex sheets) and dry overnight, until crunchy.

    These smell so good while they are in the dehydrator, and taste great!

  • Tips for Making Crackers and Flatbreads in the Dehydrator

    If you want to make crackers or flatbread (such as the fabulous raw corn tortilla recipe), you will need to have some Teflex sheets, as all recipes call for them. Teflex sheets are thin flexible sheets which you put on top of the dehydrator screen, so that goopy or drippy things don’t end up falling through the screen, or so that, in a case such as crackers and flatbreads, you can smooth the dough on to them.

    Nearly all recipes I have seen for raw crackers and flatbreads call for dividing the dough onto two or more Teflex sheets, and spreading the dough out to the edges of the sheet, using either your hands or a spatula of some sort.

    Now, I have discovered three things which make the process of spreading raw cracker or flatbread dough onto a Teflex sheet a snap (more…)

  • ‘Sauteed’ Mushrooms in the Dehydrator

    This is one of our favourite raw food recipes using the dehydrator. These mushrooms are delicious, and truly taste as if they’d been sauteed, only somehow better! And are so much better for you, packed with all of their vitamins and nutrients. Did you know that mushrooms are a good source of protein?

    This recipe comes from my favourite raw food cookbook, Raw Food/Real World, and after trying it, you’ll understand why it’s my favourite!

    You’ll need:

    2 cups mushrooms
    1-2 Tablespoons olive oil
    2 teaspoons balsamic vinegar
    2 teaspoons soy sauce (Raw Food/Real World recommends Namu Shoyu)
    fresh rosemary
    fresh oregano
    salt
    pepper

    Cut the mushrooms (Raw Food/Real World uses oyster mushrooms, but I have used all kinds, and they are all wonderful) into bite sized pieces or slices. Put them in a bowl.

    To the mushrooms add 1 to 2 tablespoons of olive oil, the balsamic vinegar, the soy sauce, and a bit of salt and pepper.

    Mix well, and add in a couple of sprigs of fresh rosemary and a couple of sprigs of fresh oregano, as well as teaspoon or two of each well minced.

    Turn this out onto a (more…)

  • Raw Corn Tortillas

    We absolutely love these, and they are so easy to make!

    This recipe is from Raw Food/Real World: 100 Recipes to Get the Glow by Matthew Kenney and Sarma Melngailis. I adore this book!

    Take 3 cups of corn kerns, either cut fresh from the ear, or frozen corn which you have thawed. We use a package of Cascadian Farms organic frozen corn, which works out to just three cups.

    In a food processor, chop up the corn with 1 1/2 cups diced yellow or red bell pepper.

    To the corn/pepper mixture add (more…)