Posts Tagged ‘gluten free cooking’

Turmeric

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Turmeric, an orange-yellow spice native to East Asia, has long been prized for the warmth it lends to cooked dishes and its powerful healing properties.

Like its cousin, ginger, the rhizome part of the plant is used in food and medicine. Rhizomes may look like roots but are actually stems that grow horizontally underground. The rhizome is dug up, cleaned, sun-dried, and most commonly ground into a fine powder although some grate and use the fresh stem.

In the kitchen, turmeric is an essential component of many curry blends but may, also, be found as a stand-alone spice. Its pungent smell and bitter, astringent taste lend a peculiar yet grounding quality to many dishes. Turmeric is also used as a natural coloring agent, turning sauces, vegetables, and meats into a warm color, inviting to the eye.

In Ayurvedic medicine, turmeric is favored for its antiseptic, antibacterial, and anti-inflammatory properties. Frequently employed to treat disorders of the gut, turmeric enhances digestion, soothes gas and distention, and creates an environment hospitable to friendly intestinal flora. Turmeric is also commonly used to help regulate the female reproductive system and bolster fertility in men. In recent years, a special compound in turmeric called curcumin has been given much attention in the West. Scientists are currently studying curcumin for its incredible anti-inflammatory activities, including its potential to reverse many serious or degenerative health conditions such as Alzheimer’s and cancer.

Here’s a recipe for chicken tagine (inspired by this recipe for lamb tagine), a thick stew cooked throughout North Africa and the Middle East, which utilizes turmeric and other regional aromatic herbs and spices. Cook turmeric before consuming, and start in small quantities to give your belly–and your tastebuds–time to adjust. Always consult a knowledgeable practitioner before using herbs for medicinal purposes.

Ingredients:

Olive Oil

2 lbs chicken meat, boneless, cut into 1 1/2 inch squares

1/4 tsp ground turmeric

1/2 tsp ground cumin

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1/4 tsp ground cloves

1/2 tsp ground cardomom

3/4 tsp ground coriander

1 tsp salt

2 inches fresh ginger peeled and grated or finely chopped

8 garlic cloves finely chopped

5 carrots cut in half then julienned

1 tbsp lemon juice

16 oz vegetable broth

1 tbsp tomato paste

1 tbsp honey or maple syrup

The night or morning before cooking, place cut chicken in a glass dish and toss with 2 tbsp olive oil and the combined ground spices, salt, half of the chopped garlic, and half of the grated ginger. Mix until all the chicken is well coated. Let sit overnight or for at least 8 hours in the refrigerator.

When you’re ready to cook, heat 2-3 tbsp olive oil in a large, heavy pot over medium high heat. Add chicken one piece at a time until the bottom of pot is covered. Brown the chicken on all sides, remove to a plate, and repeat process until all the chicken is browned and adding olive oil as necessary.

After removing all the chicken from the pan, add the carrots and onions to the pot and cook until they just begin to caramelize. Add the remaining ginger and garlic and cook for 2 more minutes. Return the chicken to the pot and add broth, lemon juice, tomato paste, and honey. Bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer and cook covered for 45 minutes.

Check pot every 15 minutes to ensure liquids haven’t been too reduced and add broth or water as necessary.

After 45 minutes, you should have a thick stew with tender, flavorful meat. Spoon over brown rice or quinoa for a tasty variation.

Chef to Plate Celiac Awareness Project

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

May is Celiac Awareness Month!

The Gluten Intolerance Group of North America, one of the foremost leaders in America supporting folks with gluten intolerance and Celiac and raising public awareness of these topics, unrolls their 2nd Annual Campaign. The Chef to Plate Campaign helps spread awareness of Celiac Disease and gluten intolerance to restaurants through dining. They estimate this simple campaign reached 1.6 million people last year! Ways you can participate:

  1. Send the GIG restaurants with gluten-free menus you frequent and trust. They will send them an invitation to participate. Click HERE to sign up your restaurant. Or send complete information to rebecca.powell@gluten.net to recommend your favorite restaurants with gluten-free menus.
  2. Help distribute the campaign materials to restaurants in your area. GIG will send you all the information and the participating restaurants. All you have to do it hand-deliver the materials to the restaurant before May 1st. Click HERE to sign up.
  3. Spread the word about this campaign to the public.

Restaurants loved participating last year. Please help the GIG spread awareness about gluten intolerance.

Gluten Free Flours and Fillers

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

There are plenty of online resources for gluten-free flours, but just so you don’t have to harvest them from a dozen different sites, I’ve included them here.

This is not an exhaustive list, but these are the ones you’ll most commonly find. For a discussion of the pros and cons of various flour as well as ideas on how to use them, please visit my podcast series with Tiffany Pollard at: http://community.eatingforevolution.com/articles/?ac=dg4h6rib

If you’re having trouble with gluten, you can still enjoy:

  • Almond flour
  • Amaranth
  • Arrowroot
  • Baking soda (most)
  • Baking powder (most)
  • Bean flour
  • Brown rice flour
  • Buckwheat flour
  • Chickpea flour
  • Corn flour
  • Corn starch
  • Cornmeal
  • Date flour
  • Fava bean flour
  • Flaxmeal
  • Green pea flour
  • Guar gum
  • Hazelnut flour
  • Harina
  • Lecithin
  • Mesquite
  • Millet flour
  • Polenta flour
  • Potato flour
  • Potato starch
  • Quinoa flour
  • Sorghum flour
  • Sorghum gum
  • Soy flour (can be irritating to a compromised bowel)
  • Sweet rice flour
  • Tapioca flour
  • Teff (make sure it’s not blended with wheat flour)
  • White rice flour
  • Xantham gum

These are the flours you’ll want to avoid:

  • All-purpose flour
  • White flour
  • Wheat flour
  • Enriched flour
  • Bleached flour
  • Whole meal flour
  • Barley flour
  • Graham flour
  • Oat flour
  • High protein flour
  • Durum flour
  • Semolina flour
  • Kamut flour
  • Triticale flour
  • Rye flour
  • Soba flour
  • Spelt flour
  • Wheat gluten and “vital” wheat gluten
  • Starch and “modified food starch
  • Malt anything

Aduki Squash Stew

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

This delicious recipe came from the Institute of Integrative Nutrition, the school where I received my Health Counseling training. I varied it a bit by adding a couple tablespoons of fresh-grated ginger and ground cumin, and cooking in vegetable stock instead of plain water to fill out the flavor and enhance the nutritional value. In Chinese Medicine, aduki beans support the Kidney Qi, essential for healthy reproductive function, and the squash deeply nourishes the Spleen Qi, promoting digestive health. This stew is warming and great for people with weak constitutions.

Prep Time: 10 Minutes

Cook Time: 1 hour

Yields: 4 Servings

Ingredients:
1 pound winter squash (kabocha, butternut)

1 ½ cups aduki beans, soaked

3 inches seaweed (like kombu or wakame)

5 cups of water (or vegetable stock)

Sea salt

*Grated ginger, optional

 

Directions: Peel and cube squash into 2 inch squares (can leave skins on if edible)

Place washed beans and seaweed into a pot. Add water and bring to a boil. Cover and simmer for 30 minutes. Uncover and add squash cubes. Cover and simmer for 30 more minutes. Uncover, add sea salt, and stir until water evaporates.

Notes: Try with roots like carrot, parsnip, and turnip. These roots don’t need more than 20 minutes to cook with beans.

Roasted Winter Vegetables

Monday, December 7th, 2009

The non-cook will love roasted vegetables: functional food preparation at its finest.

Requiring few ingredients and utensils, and virtually zero cooking skill, you can have a hot and hearty dish in less than hour flat.

Root vegetables, grown deep in the ground and available during cold winter months, connect us to our immediate environment and help keep our immune systems strong. Energetically, they have a “grounding” or downward-descending activity, which deeply nourishes the body and encourages digestive and reproductive health.

You will need:

–An assortment of vegetables—I particularly like Jerusalem artichokes, Brussels sprouts, turnips, beets, and rutabaga. Carrots, onions and potatoes are also popular picks.

–Sea salt and any seasonings you like. Sage, parsley, cumin, turmeric and hot curry make delicious roasted vegetables.

–Glass baking pan

–Wooden spoon

Super easy instructions:

1)      Preheat oven to 400 degrees on bake (or roast) setting.

2)      Wash and destem an assortment of vegetables—I particularly like Jerusalem artichokes, Brussels sprouts, turnips, beets, and rutabaga. Carrots, onions and potatoes are also popular picks.

3)      Place in glass baking pan with a generous amount of high heat tolerant cooking oil (such as coconut or palm butter).

4)      Add a bit of salt and keep it simple, or season and spice to your heart’s desire. Sage, parsley, cumin, turmeric, curry make delicious roasted vegetables.

5)      Place in oven for 10 or so minutes, then give the vegetables a rotation with a wooden spoon to coat them evenly with the oils and seasonings.

6)      Return to the oven and let them cook longer. The exact length of time they will need in the oven is determined by which vegetables you’ve used, but generally between 15 and 45 minutes is sufficient.

7)      Remove from heat, let stand to cool, and enjoy!

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