Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

vegan

Ratatouille

Dinner, Sides, vegan, Vegetables, VegetarianTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments

Ratatouille.

Ratatouille is a French vegetable stew. Back in the days it was characterized as peasant food, because vegetables were cheap.

In this version the vegetables are thinly sliced, and arranged nicely in the tomato sauce. I looks like it takes forever, but if you slice all the vegetables first, it only takes a few minutes, and looks like a million dollars.

We often have ratatouille as a side dish or served with rice and a slice of some good bread. Sprinkle some fresh shaved parmesan cheese on the ratatouille as you serve it, and it takes it over the top. Another advantage by cooking it like this is, that you get some nice caramelization of the vegetables, which gives added flavor to the dish.
Pick good quality vegetables, because this is a rather simple dish, and the vegetables are the stars, so the better the vegetables the better the dish. I normally use canned tomatoes for the sauce, but you can easily substitute it with crushed fresh tomatoes, it might even be better.

Leftovers will keep a day or two in the refrigerator, and are fantastic as breakfast with a poached egg, kinda like a Shakshuka.


Serves 3-4 as a side

Ingredients:

  • 1 can crushed tomatoes

  • 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil

  • ¼ teaspoon apple cider vinegar

  • 2 cloves garlic, minced

  • 1 tablespoon fresh basil, about 3-4 large leaves, sliced

  • 1 teaspoon herbs de Provence spice mix

  • ¼ teaspoon salt

  • ¼ teaspoon freshly grounded black pepper

  • ¼ teaspoon chili powder

  • 1 medium red onion, thinly sliced

  • 1-2 large zucchini, I used both summer squash and zucchini

  • 1 Japanese eggplant, or regular eggplant, with quartered slices

  • 3-4 large fresh tomatoes, sliced

  • 2-3 small bell peppers, sliced

Instructions:

Preheat oven to 350℉ (180℃). Lightly grease a 9" baking dish and set aside. I used a round dish here, but any ovenproof dish will do.

In a mixing bowl, combine the crushed tomatoes, oil and vinegar, and stir in salt and the other spices.

Pour the tomato mixture into the prepared baking dish in an even layer..

Ratatouille ready to serve.

Stack the veggie slices in alternating patters, you don't have to go all OCD on this, it will be pretty no matter how you do this. The most important thing is to spread the onions around, so it spreads its flavor throughout.

Sprinkle a little olive oil on top to encourage the caramelization of the vegetables.

Bake for about an hour, until the tomato sauce is bubbling and the veggies are tender, but not mushy.

Serve the ratatouille hot or warm.

Enjoy!

Lemony Kale and White Bean Soup

Dinner, Poultry, Soup, vegan, VegetarianTove Balle-PedersenComment

Lemony Kale and White Bean Soup

My mom often made kale soup during the winter months, but her soup was made with very fine chopped kale, it was kinda grated. It felt like I was eating the fresh cutting from the lawn, and the cut of meat was very fatty. To be honest, it was far from a favorite of mine, but my mom and dad loved it.

So here many years later, after I have been using kale in green salads, I wanted to try a white bean and kale soup, hoping not to visit my childhood kale soup traumas. Maybe that was why it took me years to muster enough courage to give it a try. As it turned out, this soup was nothing like my moms kale soup, actually it has become one of my favorite winter soups. The different textures and the tanginess of this soup makes all the difference. It makes an appearance on the menu in my house several times a month. It’s easy to make, and you have a comforting, warm, and healthy meal on the table within 25-30 minutes.

Normally I use Lacinato kale also known as Dinosaur, or Tuscan kale, but any kale will do. Just make sure to give it a rough chop, so you have something to chew on. If you want to keep the soup vegan, use vegetable stock and omit the chicken.

Serves 4-6.

Ingredients:

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil

  • 1 large onion, chopped

  • 1 clove of garlic, crushed

  • ½ teaspoon rosemary

  • ½ teaspoon thyme

  • 2 lemon, the juice

  • 2 liter (8 cups) chicken stock (or vegetable stock)

  • 250 g raw chicken tenders, cut bite sized

  • 2 cans cannellini beans, drained (not rinsed)

  • 250 g fresh kale, roughly chopped

Directions:

Heat the olive oil in a heavy bottom pot over medium heat add the onion, and cook them until soft and translucent, you don’t want them to be brown. Add the garlic and cook for a little minute. Stir in the herbs, and add vegetable or chicken stock, lemon juice and chicken tenders. Cover, and bring the stock to a boil. Turn the heat down so it gets to a simmer. After about 15 minutes, season with salt and pepper.

Add the white beans and kale, and let it heat through befor serving. This will give the kale a bright green color, but keep it crispy. Serve the soup hot, with some good bread.

Enjoy!




Homemade Vanilla Bean Paste

Vegetarian, vegan, technique, Spices, Preserve, Frostings & FillingsTove Balle-PedersenComment
Homemade Vanilla Bean Paste

Homemade Vanilla Bean Paste

When I first moved to California, one of the things I had a hard time finding, was vanilla beans. In Denmark I never used vanilla extract, only real vanilla beans or vanilla sugar. So I always got vanilla beans sent to me in Care Packages. Eventually I discovered vanilla bean paste, and used that for most things, except for vanilla wreaths and our Christmas dessert Risalamande. Here I wanted the truer delicate vanilla flavors from the beans. Around the month of December you can find ok vanilla beans, but they aren’t as thick and plump, as the onc’s I got from Denmark. Somehow I got dragged into a vanilla cult, and now i buy the most beautiful thick and plump vanilla beans to a reasonable price online. Access to great vanilla beans, made me want to try making my own vanilla bean paste without any extract, and this recipe from Karas Couture Cakes is the most clean recipe i have found.

Makes about 250-300 ml (8½-10 fl oz)

Ingredients:

  • 16 whole vanilla beans

  • 250 g water

  • 300 g sugar

  • 50 g glucose

Directions:

Cut off the ends of the beans, you can save these, dry them and use them for vanilla sugar.

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Chop the beans into a 1/2-inch (~1cm) long pieces. Using a food processor, spice grinder or Vitamix blender, grind the beans with about half the sugar. Work in batches, so you don’t overheat machinery or the vanilla and sugar mixture. You are looking for a grey/brown sandy looking mixture.

In a medium saucepan mix the rest of the sugar, water and glucose, and heat it to a boil, let it boil for a few minutes. Add the vanilla sugar mixture to the saucepan, and let it boil for another 2 minutes, before removing from the heat.

Strain the vanilla through a fine meshed sieve, and use a flexible spatula to massage as much of the paste through the sieve. You can save this pulp and use it to make extract or vanilla sugar. I didn’t do that as I allready had some extract brewing and didn’t need more.

Pour the vanilla bean paste into clean scolded glass containers, and close the lids tightly when completely cooled. Store the vanilla bean paste in a dark place like a pantry.

DO NOT REFRIGERATE

Use vanilla bean paste in cakes, custard, ice cream, and where you would use vanilla sugar or extract.

Enjoy!

Piccalilli - Pickles

condiments, Spread & Dips, vegan, Vegetables, VegetarianTove Balle-PedersenComment
Piccalilli.

Piccalilli.

Pickles, Piccalilli or chow chow, this delicious condiment is called different thing, in different places. Growing up it was a weird sour mustardy thing my dad loved, but as an adult I realized it was a delicious, sweet & sour, curry, mustard sauce with lovely crunchy vegetables. It’s pairs very well with meats, especially with a pariserbøf. But I also like piccalilli as a condiment with grilled sausages.

Previously I’d bought piccalilli, but after trying the homemade version, I won’t go back. The flavors are great, and the part of knowing what’s in it, is really nice.

Makes 8-10 small jars.

Ingredients:

1000 g vegetables, diced small

  • 300 g cauliflower

  • 100 g summer squash

  • 100 g carrots

  • 100 g fennel

  • 100 g shallots

  • 120 g green beans

  • 130 g red bell pepper

  • 50 g celery

  • 50 g salt

Pickling juice:

  • 320 ml vinegar

  • 200 ml water

  • 150 g sugar

  • 40 g honey

Spice Paste:

  • 50 g corn starch

  • 3 teaspoons curry

  • 1 teaspoon turmeric

  • 4 teaspoons Colman’s mustard powder

  • 1 teaspoon ground coriander

  • 1 teaspoon cumin

  • 1 teaspoon ground ginger

  • 100 ml vinegar

Makes 8-10 small jars.

Directions:

Depending on how coarse you like your piccalilli, you can dice the vegetables in about ⅕-⅖ -inch (½-1 cm) pieces, or blitz them in a food processor. I like to be able to se what kind of vegetables I’m eating, so I do a coarser chop.

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Wash and peel the vegetables, before chopping them. Mix the chopped vegetables with salt, and place them covered in refrigerator over night.

Prepare the jars and lids by cleaning them and scolding them in boiling water. Rinse them in a conserving agent, (I used a Danish conserving agent called Atamon, sodium benzoate) or rinse them in a 100 proof vodka.

Rinse the vegetables thoroughly in lots of water, drain them well. You can dry the vegetables on kitchen towels.

Make the paste in a bowl or a mini food chopper, making sure to get a homogeneous mixture. Set aside.

Heat the vinegar, water, and sugar until the sugar has dissolved. Mix in some tablespoons of the warm vinegar in the spice paste, two times, before adding all of the paste to the warm vinegar. Bring the vinegar to a boil while whisking. The vinegar will now thicken to a sauce, and let it boil for about 5 minutes. Add the vegetables to the sauce and let them get about 1-2 minutes of heat, before jarring.

Keep the piccalilli in the refrigerator for about 6 weeks before serving, giving the flavors time to mellow out and blend.

The Piccalilli will keep 6 months in the refrigerator.

Enjoy!


Pickled Cucumbers

condiments, Dinner, Preserve, Snacks, technique, Vegetables, vegan, VegetarianTove Balle-PedersenComment
Pickled Cucumbers

Pickled Cucumbers

My parents grew their own vegetable in their large vegetable garden, and of course my mom made sure to preserve the large amount of produce by pickling and freezing. We all loved my moms pickled cucumbers, with our dinner or on the open faced sandwiches. Especially on liverpate. So when I found crown dill and pickling cucumbers at my local grocery store, I had to try my moms old recipe. I have a hard time learning that the pickled cucumbers in my world are called pickles here in the States, but eventually I might learn to accept it. 😉

5-8 jars.

Ingredients:

Brine:

  • 200 g salt

  • 2 liters (68 oz) water

Pickling:

  • 1500 g pickling cucumbers

  • 1250 ml vinegar

  • 780 g sugar

  • 13-15 slices fresh horseradish

  • 5 teaspoons yellow mustard seeds

  • 1 teaspoon fennel seeds

  • 2 teaspoon black peppercorns

  • 8 crown dill (1-2 in each jar)

  • 6-8 dried red chilies

Direction:

Combine the salt and water in a pitcher and stir until the salt has dissolved. Rinse the cucumbers thoroughly and snip off the blossom end stem. Prick cucumbers with a table fork. Set aside. Pour the salt water over the cucumbers. Place a plate on top to keep the cucumbers submerged. Let stand 12 hours in the refrigerator. Drain the cucumber and place them in scolded* jars. Add horseradish, dill and the spices to the jars.

I sliced 4 of the cucumbers in thick slices for some more spicy pickles. I placed the slices in 2 smaller jars with 1 fatalii chili in one and 1 habanero chili in the other. HOT HOT HOT  🌶 🌶 🌶  

Boil the vinegar with the sugar, and pour it in the jars, making sure to cover the cucumbers completely. Place the lid on the jars, not tightening them completely.

After 2 days, drain out the vinegar and let it come to a boil, maybe adding more vinegar and sugar. Pour the vinegar over the cucumbers again, adding new horseradish and/or sodium benzoate. Seal the jars tight. Do not boil the horseradish.

*You need to clean the jars and sterilize them by soaking them in boiling water. Same goes for the lids. Submerge the lid for a few minutes in a bowl of boiling water. Rinse jars and lids with alcohol like strong vodka or cognac. 

These will keep for a few months at room temperature, but you can keep them in the refrigerator  too. In my house they won't last long.