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VANILLA LATTE is a blog dedicated to food & travel with occasional random stuff thrown in. It is managed and written by me, Maggie Ha.


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Moroccan Stew with Green Onion Couscous 19Jul09

Moroccan Stew with Green Onion Couscous

The name of the dish should really be “Meaty Roasted Squash Moroccan Stew on Roasted Portobello Mushrooms with Green Onion Garlic Couscous” but it’s a bit long so I shortened it. :) It’s got heaps of veggies and spices, a very hearty dish and perfect for winter dinners. Hmmm might even go nicely as a pie filling!

Now when I said “meaty” I mean whatever choice of meat you want to put in it. I used a delicious soy meat, but you can use steak, chicken, lamb, whatever you want! Just make sure it’s cut into cubes around the same size and the rest of your veggies. I made this dish vegan but you can of course add meat to your liking for a carnivorous version. Season up the “meat” with salt and pepper and then brown before adding to the stew at the end. If you can find some flavored sausages, it would go really nicely as well!

The recipe looks long and complicated but it really isn’t that bad, definitely worth the extra effort! This dish is incredibly flavorful and jam packed with veggies. The roasted mushroom adds a great texture and taste to the whole dish. Top with some cilantro and there you have it, a delicious hearty meal! You know, a dollop of Greek yogurt on top would be great as well….next time! Hope you like it!

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Yummy Red Cabbage Slaw 20May09

Red Cabbage Slaw

I wasn’t quite sure what to name this dish. It’s a little Asian, a little tangy, a little crunchy, but most of all a whole lot of YUMMY! I love red cabbage slaws. My favorite would be the Szechuan slaw that comes with the Vegetarian Focaccia Sandwich at CPK. YUM. I guess you can say this was inspired by it, it’s not quite exactly the same but close!

I’m still very much on my health kick, so this dish is good for you AND vegan! I need to make sure I keep posting all my vegan recipes before I forget them! I’ve got another vegan red cabbage slaw recipe that I’ll post at a later date. For now enjoy this yummy one!

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Fennel, Orange & Herb Salad 20Apr09

Fennel, Orange & Herb Salad

I love Martha Stewart. I wake up early on Sundays to sit on the couch for Marthathon. That’s the entire weeks worth of Martha. It’s awesome. Vini usually sleeps in and wakes up just in time as the last episode finishes, funny how he times it just right.

Anyway, Martha did her Fennel, Orange and Parsley salad from her Everyday FOOD. It just looked so refreshing even through the TV that I had to make it. Of course, I slightly altered it. I thought the olives would take away from the salad so I kept those out. I also added a ton more fresh herbs and the result was so delicious. This goes really well with my heath kick - currently on day 2.

Here’s my version of Martha’s fennel, orange and parsley salad. Hope you like it!

Ingredients:
1 fennel bulb, washed and trimmed
2 oranges
1/4 cup of chopped parsley (bit of the stems are good too!)
1/4 cup of chopped mint leaves
1/4 cup of chopped cilantro leaves
2 stocks of green onion, chopped
small itty bitty drizzle of extra virgin olive oil
pinch of sea salt
fresh ground black pepper

Step 1: Slice and chop!
First we slice the oranges. Cut off the top and bottoms of the orange and slice off the peel with a knife. Now carefully cut out each segment into a salad bowl. Save the remainder of the orange to squeeze the juice out after. Now, trim the frilly bits off the fennel, you only need the bulb. Cut into quarters and cut out the core - it’s very bitter. Cut into thin slices into the salad bowl. Squeeze the orange juices of the two oranges over the fennel to keep it from browning. Chop up the parsley, mint, cilantro and green onion and add to the salad bowl.

Step 2: Dress!
Sprinkle with a couple pinches of sea salt and black pepper. Drizzle with a little bit of extra virgin olive oil. Toss and serve!

That’s it, pretty simple and incredibly delicous. Try it out, even if you’re not a big fan of fennel, the orange and sea salt really compliment the licoricey taste.

Ratatouille, Remy Style 15Feb09

Ratatouille

An ode to Ratatouille, the movie, and to delicious hearty rain weather food.  Our fabulous sunshine has gone into hiding again and for the past week it’s been nothing but gloom and rain. It’s supposed to be Summer!

Valentine’s day was fabulous, we went to a semi-fancy dinner at Deep Blue Bistro and had one of the best meals I’ve had in Sydney.

So ratatouille. It’s traditionally a French vegetable stew but since Pixar’s Ratatouille people are a little confused since it looks like a nice stack of veggies in the movie. Well, I’ve made a combination of what the traditional dish should be with the sliced vegetable stack like how Remy did in the movie.

It came out great and I’m so happy I opted for cous cous intead of pasta. The dish is pretty hearty as it is. Oh! And you can make this dish vegan but not adding any cheese at the end.

Ingredients:
1 can of peeled tomatoes
3 tablespoons of tomato paste
2 roma tomatoes - thinly sliced
1 red bell pepper
1 green bell pepper
1 medium size eggplant - thinly sliced
1 medium size zucchini - thinly sliced
3 shallots - finely chopped
1 yellow onion - finely chopped
1 whole head of garlic
2-3 cloves of garlic - finely chopped
3 sprigs of marjoram
3 sprigs of thyme
1 sprig of rosemary - leaves finely chopped
handful of basil leaves
extra virgin olive oil
balsamic vinegar
sea salt
fresh ground pepper
garnish with Parmigiano-Reggiano (optional)

preheat oven to 425°F or 220°C

Step 1: The Prep!
First things first, take that whole garlic head and wrap it in a big piece of foil BUT leave a bit of air in there and pinch the top to seal it. Throw that in the oven for about 35 - 40 minutes. Now onto the bell peppers. Cut each one into big wedges (quarters are a good size), take out the seeds and stem. In a baking pan drizzle in a nice layer of extra virgin olive oil and then place the bell peppers in there, sprinkle some sea salt and fresh ground pepper. Roll em around a bit and throw in the oven for about 20 minutes or until nicely cooked through.

Step 2: The Sauce!
While some of the veggies are roasting, we’ll start the sauce. In a large saucepan on medium heat drizzle in some extra virgin olive oil (about 2 tablespoons). Once the oil is heated, toss in the finely chopped shallots and let that sweat. While it’s cooking, throw in your herbs… that would be the rosemary, the marjoram leaves, the thyme leaves and some basil leaves chopped up. Don’t forget the salt and pepper! Now throw in the onions, drizzle a little bit more olive oil and stir. While the onions and shallots are sweating, in a large bowl empty the can of peeled tomatoes. With your hands, squish each of the tomatoes and make sure you get them into small pieces.

As soon as the onions and shallots are translucent, pour in the tomatoes from the can that you’ve just smushed with your hands. Lower the heat to a medium-low and slowly stir in the tomato paste. Stir in another little drizzle of extra virgin olive oil and let that simmer. Add a pinch of salt and pepper if you like.

By now, your garlic and bell peppers should be ready. Carefully take those out but make sure to keep the oven on. Carefully squeeze out the garlic gloves out and roughly run a knife through it. Add the garlic to the tomato sauce simmering away. Use a spatula to smush it against the side of the pan a little to get the flavors mixing through. Turn the heat down to low and now we’ll chop the bell peppers. Be careful since they might be hot still! Let them cool more if they are. Dice the bell peppers but make sure you cut through the skin as well. Throw all those diced bell peppers into the tomato sauce. It should be a pretty thick and chunky almost chutney consistency now. We’re ready to assemble.

Step 3: The Bake!
In a baking dish, pour in the tomato sauce evenly along the whole dish. You can sprinkle some Parmigiano-Reggiano here if you like. Now to layer the veggies. I went eggplant - tomato - zucchini - tomato - zucchini. But really, you can kind of do whatever you want. Just layer them all on top of the sauce but make sure you don’t double up, you’re going to want to roast the veggies in the end. Once you’ve got a good layer, drizzle a just little bit more olive oil over the top. Drizzle a little balsamic vinegar over the vegetables. Top off with the finely chopped garlic (about 2 cloves) and a little bit of thinly sliced basil.

Cover the dish with parchment paper, then foil and in the oven it goes for 30 minutes. At this time, cook the cous cous according to the package! It’s usually 1 cup of water for 1 cup of dry cous cous. After 30 minutes, remove the foil and parchment paper, and let it bake on the top rack for another 10-15 minutes to roast the vegetables on the top.

Plate with some cous cous, layers of veggies and chunky sauce. Grate some Parmigiano-Reggiano on top, add some fresh ground pepper, or a little pinch of thinly sliced basil.

Bon Appétit!

Ratatouille

World’s Best Guacamole 18Jan09

World's Best Guacamole
I know it’s a bold statement, “World’s Best Guacamole”. BUT, if there’s so many places that claim to have the world’s best pizza and world’s best chili burger and world’s best coffee… why can’t I? Actually, it’s probably not the world’s best guacamole - it’s just a damn good traditional guac. And I named it “world’s best” because of Nigella Lawson. I am not a fan. She doesn’t show me anything  common sense doesn’t already teach me. Anyway, I was watching her show (I know, I torture myself) and she was doing a “latin” theme. She made a guacamole but put the most disgusting things in it… like blue cheese. Why would you ruin such a fabulous dip like that?! So, I’ve decided the world needs to know how to make a real guacamole. And I’ve had a lot of friends ask about the recipe. Rant over, recipe begins:

Ingredients:
2 ripe hass avocados (you’ll know it is ripe by pressing down around the stem, soft = good to go!)
1 tomato - diced
1 yellow or red onion - diced (I prefer yellow, but for a milder onion crunch, go with red)
1 handful of cilantro - finely chopped
2 green onion stalks - chopped thin
1 jalapeño - diced (You can remove the seeds if you don’t want it too spicy)
1 lemon
pinch of cayenne pepper
fresh ground pepper
splash of habañero hot sauce
sea salt
garlic salt

Optional:
1/2 red bell pepper (aka capsicum) - diced
1/2 a cucumber - diced

Step 1: Chop chop
In a large bowl, throw in all your chopped ingredients. Chopped onions, jalapeño, cilantro, tomato, green onion and optional red bell pepper and cucumber. The red pepper and cucumber adds a really nice crunch to the guac, I generally like to add a little bit of each to give it a different texture. Traditionally, it’s without. Okay, now season this mixture with fresh ground pepper and sea salt. Mix it all up and now we’re ready for the avocados.

Step 2: Scoop
Now cut the avocado in half, take out the pit and scoop in the yummy inside into the bowl. Save the pits! We’ll need them later. Do this to the 2 avocados and then squeeze the juice of an entire lemon all over it. This will help it from turning brown! Now add in the spicy parts. Splash of habañero if you like spice. Dash of cayenne pepper - to your liking - I like spice so I’m usually generous. Sprinkle some garlic salt and fresh ground pepper over the avocados.

Step 3: Smash & serve
Now take a fork and smash up the avocado against the walls of the bowl while mixing in the other ingredients on the bottom. You don’t need to go crazy, just enough to get the avocado mixed in with the other ingredients. You’re not making a puree so don’t over mix! Chunky is good! Now stick the two avocado pits in the bowl and that will help it from browning as well. Throw some chips in a bowl and you’re ready to serve!

Tips:
When storing guacamole, make sure your saran wrap (cling wrap) is touching the actual guacamole and not letting any air in. This will keep it nice and fresh! You can also squeeze lemon juice all over the top layer before doing that but it will change the flavor of your left over guac - just a bit more lemony.

Chinese Rice Noodle Rolls with Peanut Butter 12Aug08

noodle things with peanut butter

Okay this recipe is SUPER easy. My mom used to make it for me for breakfast when I had game days. But she always makes hers better somehow, I think it’s just made with extra Chinese mom love.

Ingredients:
fresh rice noodle rolls (you can find these at any asian market, next to the fresh flat cut rice noodles most commonly used in seafood chow fun.) *make sure it’s the ROLLS not cut noodles*
peanut butter (smooth works best)
maggi seasoning OR soy sauce
finely chopped fresh cilantro (or coriander)
fresh ground pepper (optional)
toasted sesame seeds (purely for garnish really)
canola oil
sriracha chili sauce (or any other asian hot sauce of your choice)

Step 1: Fry em up!
You can keep the rice noodle rolls in the fridge for a few days after purchasing and they will be just fine. Drizzle some canola oil on a heated sauce pan. (Do not use olive oil, it will not taste the same!) Lay each roll down and fry on each side until a bubbly layer starts to form and the middle is soft. You can leave them as long as you like until a light yellow brown depending on how crunchy you want the sides. Keep in mind that it will get a bit soggy and chewy later the longer you leave it on. Plate and you’re done with the cooking!

Step 2: The decorating
Layer on some peanut butter on each roll. It should be a bit melty and smell absolutely delicious. Next put a couple splashes of maggi seasoning OR soy sauce over the place. Next comes the ground pepper and sesame seeds - just a little will do! Then top with the chopped cilantro/coriander. Garnish with some hot sauce on the side and you’re ready to rock and roll.

Optional:
My mom likes to add a little of that Japanese seaweed seasoning, very interesting flavors when it’s the kind that has salty and sweet bits.

Hope you like it!

Grilled Fennel Salad 9Jun08

Well I thought I’d explore fennel a different way this time… grilled! I think I liked it better raw even though it’s a bit licoricey, but I need to invest in a slicer. So here it is:

grilled fennel salad

Ingredients:
fennel - sliced as thin as possible
baby spinach - washed and dried
orange cherry tomatoes - sliced
cucumber - sliced
red onion - just a few slices
olive oil
fresh mint leaves
salt + pepper
honey
mustard
apple cider vinegar

Step 1: The grilling
Heat up a cast iron pan and drizzle some olive oil on top. Place the fennel as slices on the pan and grill on each side until wilted and crusty brown.

Step 2: The salad dressing
Whisk a spoonful of mustard and honey together with a couple splash of apple cider vinegar. Whisk in some olive oil. add more honey or apple cider vinegar depending on taste.

Step 3: The salad
Mix the dressing in with the baby spinach first. Then layer in the sliced cucumbers, onions and tomatoes.

Step 4: The fennel topping
Place the fennel in a bowl and drizzle with some olive oil. Add salt and pepper to your heart’s desire! Chop up the mint leaves and mix those in with the fennel. Place this mixture on top of the salad and there you go!

Oven Roasted Artichoke, Fennel Salad, Curried Vegetable Soup 1Jun08

I only have time for really crappy photos right now so here they are:

artichokes

fennel salad

curried vegetable soup w/ chili oil

I am having camera and lighting issues… ugh!

Asparagus, Pea, Bruschetta Pasta 5May08

mmmm yum

Ingredients:
bow-tie pasta - boiled al dente with a pinch of salt
asparagus-  washed cut into slant
frozen peas
tomatoes - diced
garlic - chopped very fine
sweet onion (the yellow one) - diced
fresh basil leaves - chopped fine
balsamic vinegar
olive oil

Step 1: The base
Saute onions in olive oil until clearish. This is where I like to throw in my seasonings - red chili flakes, salt, pepper. Add a little bit more olive oil then throw in the frozen peas and cook until bright green. Add a little bit more olive oil then throw in the asparagus!

Step 2: The bruschetta
While you’re working on step 1, cut up all the pieces for the bruschetta. Mix the tomatoes, garlic, basil leaves, balsamic vinegar and olive oil and let it sit.

Step 3: The mix
When the asparagus is tender, turn off the heat and throw in the cooked pasta. Stir and add olive oil where needed.

Step 4: Plate
Layer the pasta mix onto the plate first. Then add the bruschetta to the top. Salt and pepper to your liking.

Can be served hot or cold!

I have several variations for this dish but this was the latest one. I may like this one the best so far!

i don’t like carrots anymore 22Apr08

day 2 - i’m eating more. but i’m so hungry still. I’ve had about a tub of carrots today. i don’t think i like them anymore. they’re very dry. i think i’ll try to steam them tomorrow. i have a sudden craving for those little vegan cookies that whole foods sells. yup, not going to find that here.

hmm. just googled vegan cookies, found this wordpresser - vegan cookies.

Latest Latte

Soy Latte @ Joe Art of Coffee

It’s been a little difficult finding delicious good coffee in NY after being spoiled in Sydney. None of that brewed stuff, I’m talking about espresso based coffee. I finally found a local spot on the Upper West Side that has good coffee, Joe the Art of Coffee. Although, it’s not quite like the ones I have in Sydney, it’s pretty close. I give it a 4/5, an extra point for the mere fact that it’s the only good coffee in my neighborhood.


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