Posts tagged ‘salad’

May 18th, 2012

Granola Lunch box: Barley Greek salad with tofu feta

I’ve been all about adding cooked grains to my salads lately to bulk them out a bit. Kamut is my usual favorite (see balsamic chickpea kamut salad, orange beet and almond salad), but my stocks were low, so I decided to try something with barley instead.

I had also been planning on trying out making tofu feta for a while so I decided to make a barley greek salad! I was never a feta fan, even when I ate cheese, but I did like the tofu feta. It does still taste like tofu though, so I probably wouldn’t serve this to tofu-phobic omnivores. I made the feta on Saturday so that it nice and marinated when I put the salad together on Sunday night. I use Soyarie brand tofu. Their tofu is made in Quebec using organic soybeans from Ontario and Quebec, so it’s a great local food option! I used the tofu as is and it was quite soft, you could freeze and thaw it first if you are looking for a firmer texture.

You can serve this on its own or over romaine lettuce.

This salad came together to be much better than I was expecting. Everything just worked. Dave was pretty sceptical – barley? tofu? – and even he loved it.

Tofu Feta (Adapted from this recipe)
1 package firm tofu (I use Soyarie)
¾ cup water
¼ cup miso
2 tbs fresh squeezed lemon juice
2 tbs white vinegar
1 clove garlic

Drain as must water as you can out of the tofu. Slice the tofu, wrap it in a tea towel, and place something heavy on top of it. Let it drain for at least 20 minutes or as long as 2 hours. Blend together all other remaining ingredients.  Dice the pressed tofu into 1 cm cubes. Put the tofu cubes in a container (preferably one with a lid) and cover with the marinade mixture. Shake it up and put it in the fridge. Shake it up every so often when you happen to be near the fridge.

Greek Salad
½ cup barley, uncooked
2 green bell pepper, diced
1 small red onion, finely diced
1 can sliced black olives
1 pint grape tomatoes (or any kind of tomatoes you like)

Cook the barley in 1 ½ cup water for 50-60 minutes; drain and cool. Mix together the barley, remaining ingredients and marinated tofu in a large bowl.

Dressing
1 ½ tbs fresh lemon juice
1 tbs olive oil
1 tsp dried oregeno
salt and pepper to taste

Whisk together and pour over salad.

This recipe was submitted to Ricki’s Wellness Weekend.

April 7th, 2012

Granola Lunchbox: Orange and beet salad with kamut

Happy Easter and Passover everyone! I don’t have any Easter goodies for you but I do have a healthy lunch recipe that you may want for next week if you eat a bit too much chocolate this weekend.


I am so in love with this lunch right now. We pretty much always eat the same thing for lunch everyday and often, once Friday rolls around, I’m a little tired of it. But that was not the case this week! This salad is filling enough to count as a meal and there is just something about the juicy oranges, roasted (local) beets, chewy kamut and crunchy roasted almonds that is simply irresistible. This is definitely going to be joining our regular lunch rotation.

Kamut is a grain closely related to wheat and you cook it just like rice. I absolutely love it on salads! If you don’t have kamut, wheat or spelt berries or wild rice would make a good substitution.

I didn’t find that it needed any dressing but if you must have some, I bet this maple balsamic one will go nicely.

Orange and Beet Salad (makes 5 lunch sized salads)

2 large heads romaine or leaf lettuce
1-2 lbs beets
1 ½ cup raw whole almonds
1 – 1 ½ cups uncooked kamut
5 navel oranges

On the weekend, wash and chop the lettuce, roast the beets (I didn’t use any oil), toast the almonds and cook the kamut. Once the almonds are cool, transfer to them to a food processor and pulse a few times to chop them up. Put your salad togehter each morning and top with orange pieces.

October 2nd, 2011

Vegan MoFo Creamy Kale Salad

It’s Vegan MoFo (Vegan Month of Food) time again and I’m super excited!  The timing is pretty crappy for me since I’m going to be super busy with the Ontario provincial election until Election Day on October 6th (hence this post coming in just under the wire!). But I’m going to do my best to post every day! Thankfully I have a backlog of recipes and pics that I never got around to blogging about.

This is my new fav kale salad! I’ve probably made this like 5 times over the last few months. It’s incredible healthy, easy to make, and delicious. What more could you want in a recipe? Make this while there is still beautiful local kale in season!

Creamy Kale Salad

Salad
1 bunch curly kale
1 tsp olive oil
¼ tsp salt

Dressing ingredients (adapted from Sesame-Flax Dressing from The Vegan Chef)
⅓ cup tahini
¼ cup fresh squeezed lemon juice
2 tbs mild miso
1 tbs honey or other liquid sweetener
pinch cayenne
1 inch piece of ginger, minced
1 small clove garlic, minced
½ cup water

De-stem, wash and rip your kale into bite size pieces. Add the oil and salt and massage the kale with your hands until it is bright green and wilted. Blend all the dressing ingredients together until smooth and creamy, add more water to get desired consistency. Add dressing to your massaged kale until it is coated in creamy goodness. You will have left over dressing.

This recipe is great for weekday lunches. I find 1 bunch of kale usually makes 2 lunch size salads. I store the massaged kale and dressing separately and just add the dressing in the morning.

August 9th, 2011

Raw Corn and Quinoa Salad

Raw Corn and Quinoa Salad

Nothing makes me crave raw food like a junk food binge (see here and here). Plus, all the super fresh local produce that is available right now just begs to be eaten simply. So I’ve been eating mostly raw for the past week trying to use up the produce that is overflowing from my fridge and garden. So I bring you a raw corn and quinoa salad with Ontario corn and peppers and tomatoes from my garden. Make sure you buy organic corn. If the corn isn’t organic it is almost guaranteed to be GMO corn from Monsanto. I added some sprouted quinoa to the salad to make it filling enough for lunch. Feel free to use cooked quinoa instead. But quinoa is seriously the easiest thing to sprout,so if you’re curious about sprouting – give it a try!

This recipe is also my contribution to Wellness Weekend over at Diet, Dessert, Dogs.

Raw Corn Quinoa Salad

4 ears corn
1 bell pepper
halved cherry tomatoes (1/2 a pint or whatever you can pick off your tomato plant)
1 small jalapeno
½ cup quinoa, sprouted*

Dressing
juice from 1 lime
1/4 tsp ground cumin
2 tsp agave
2 tsp olive oil

With a large knife scrape the corn kernels off the cob into a large bowl. Dice the bell and jalapeno peppers and add them to the bowl along with the halved cherry tomatoes. Add in your sprouted or cooked quinoa. Whisk together the dressing ingredients and poor over salad. Add salt and pepper to taste. This tastes best after chilling the fridge for an hour or two.

* There are lots of ways to sprout quinoa. I soaked the quinoa for about 8 hours then drained it and let it sprout in a sprouter. But I’ve had luck sprouting it using the jar method. I found the sprouted quinoa was ready to use in 12-24 hours. Here is a good overview of how to sprout.

July 13th, 2011

CSA Challenge: Spring (or Summer) Turnips

I’m not really a turnip fan. I usually only eat them in the depths of winter when they are pretty much the only local produce available. And even then I hide them in soups with a lot of other veggies. So I wasn’t exactly thrilled when I started getting them in my csa box. But there they are, every single week. I let them stock pile for a few weeks until I figured out what to do with them.

After some googling, I read online that they were actually very pleasant raw, so I chopped off a piece and sure enough they are very tasty! A lot less turnip tasting than their winter counterparts. So I decided to slice them thinly and make a salad out of them. I coated them in my raw cashew poppy seed dressing. This is one of my all time favorite salad dressings! It’s perfect on a spinach fruit salad or a coleslaw and it worked really well over the spring turnips.

Spring Turnip Salad with Poppy Seed Dressing (2 large servings)

6 spring turnips
1 small bunch radishes
2-3 green onions

Cashew Poppy Seed Dressing

¼ cup cashews, soaked for at least 30 minutes
3-4 tbs  water
2 heaping tsp honey, agave, or sugar
1 tbs apple cider vinegar
¼  tsp dried mustard
salt to taste
1 tsp poppy seeds

Thinly slice the turnips and radishes. The turnips are quite soft so it’s easy to get them nice and thin. Chop the green onion. Blend all the dressing ingredients except the poppy seeds until smooth and creamy and then stir in the poppy seeds.  Add the dressing to the veggies right before serving otherwise it will get watery.

June 28th, 2011

Picnic Sweet Potato Salad

I had planned to have a picnic with a good friend that I hadn’t seen in a while last week. Of course, it started raining shortly before we were supposed to meet so we ended up having lunch at her house. I made baked falafels for the main dish and cookie dough balls for desert. I also made a sweet potato salad as a side dish, mostly because I had some sweet potatoes that had been sitting in the fridge for a while and needed to be used up. I almost ended up not even taking this dish along because I didn’t think it would be anything special. But wow, was I ever pleasantly surprised! This dish far surpassed my expectations. The combination of sweet potatoes, orange, cinnamon and toasted pecans is just magical. You can make this dish in advance and it travels well so it is a great recipe for summer picnics. And a lot healthier than regular potato salad. Now, if only I could get local sweet potatoes, it would be perfect!

Unfortunately I didn’t write down the recipe. Well, I think I did write it down but on a scrap piece of paper that probably ended up in the recycling bin! I had adapted it from this recipe. In the salad I just used steamed sweet potato, green onions and toasted pecans. For the dressing I used fresh squeezed orange juice, olive oil, white wine vinegar, maple syrup, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt.

I’ll get the exact measurements down the next time I make this!

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June 12th, 2011

Granola Lunchbox: Chickpea Kamut salad with Maple Balsamic Dressing

I’ve mentioned before how I like to make all of our lunches for the week on the weekend. This recipe is one of my favorites. It’s yummy, healthy and very easy to make. I make this on those super busy weekends when I don’t have time to make something fancier. The kamut and chickpeas are both nutrient dense and filling and combine to provide all the essential amino acids that we need. Because it makes a ton and stores and travels well, this recipe would also be great for potlucks and picnics. I’m a little bit obsessed with kamut berries right now. They have this irresistible chewy texture that is so satisfying in a lunch time salad.

Chickpea Kamut Salad with Maple Balsamic Dressing (This makes a lot – enough for 10 lunches, but you can halve the recipe)

Salad

2 cups dried chickpeas, soaked (or 3 cans)
2 cups kamut berries
2-3 bell pepper, diced

Dressing (adapted from Dreena Burton’s recipe in EDBV)

½ cup balsamic vinegar
¼ cup olive oil
¼ cup maple syrup
½ tsp salt
1 ½ tsp Dijon mustard
fresh pepper to taste

Cook the chickpeas and the kamut. I use my pressure cooker for both. If you have a pressure cooker, I find 11 minutes at high pressure works perfectly for both. If you don’t have a pressure cooker use canned chickpeas and cook the kamut like you would rice. Bring the 2 cups of kamut to a boil with 4 cups water, when it reaches a boil reduce to low heat and let it simmer for 40-60 minutes. Start tasting it at 40 minutes and let it cook until it reaches a texture that you like. Add the chickpeas and kamut to a large mixing bowl. Dice bell pepper and add them to bowl. Now make the dressing. I usually add everything to a 1-cup measuring cup so that I don’t have to dirty a lot of dishes! Add the baslamic vinegar to the 1/2 cup line, then add the maple syrup to the 3/4 cup line and then add the oil to the 1 cup line. Add the remaining ingredients and then use your immersion blender to blend until everything is combined. Add the dressing to the salad and stir well. This will keep in the fridge for 5-6 days.

Serve alone or over a bed of lettuce or baby spinach.

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January 27th, 2011

Granola Lunch Box: Chickpea Taco Salad

Chickpea Taco Salad

My lunch philosophy has two main principals: having a big salad for lunch every day and making my lunches for the whole week on the weekend. Dave usually has the same thing so that means making 10 lunches.

Having a salad for lunch every day comes with two challenges, making a salad that is filling enough and keeping it interesting.

I know a lot of people struggle with what to make for healthy lunches, so I thought I would do a regular blog series on what I’m having for lunch. Plus this salad was just so yummy it needs to be shared!

I first tried taco chickpeas from this Happy Herbivore recipe but I wasn’t really crazy about eating them on regular tacos, I like my usual lentils or ground round much better. But when I was trying to decide what to make for my lunches this week, it hit me that taco chickpeas would be perfect for a taco salad.

Chickpea Taco Salad (5 lunches, double for 2 people)

Taco Roasted Chickpeas
1 tsp oil (I used coconut oil)
2 ½ cups cooked chickpeas
2 tbs taco seasoning (we made our own from this recipe, it’s easy and so much better than store bought)

Preheat the oven to 400. Put the chickpeas on a baking sheet, toss with oil and taco seasoning making sure all the chickpeas are coated. Bake for 35-40 minutes, stirring often.  Put the chickpeas away as soon as they cool or you will snack on them and have none left for lunch!

(Ok, so these chickpeas were supposed to last a week…but they were so tasty that they only ended up lasting for three days and I made more mid week!)

Salad
2-3 heads romaine lettuce
1 bunch green onions
2 green bell peppers
2-3 tomatoes
your favorite guacamole recipe

I don’t have a recipe for my guacamole. We add finely diced garlic, onion and tomato and lemon juice, salt and pepper to taste. You will want 2-3 avocados worth to make it through the week. I find the guacamole will stay good for two days (as long as there is some lemon juice in it). So I made some on Sunday for lunch on Monday and Tuesday, some on Tuesday for Wednesday and Thursday and then another small batch on Thursday for Friday. Keep everything in separate containers in the fridge. In the morning, put your lettuce and veggies in one large container and guacamole in another container. At lunch, top your salad with the guacamole and enjoy!