Corner View: Cityscapes

27 May 2009 Filed In: all the rest, corner view


A week before my daughter was born, I was beginning to get a twinge of panic.  We were having her way out in deep, dark Brooklyn, an hour’s drive if you hit full rush hour traffic.  For most women that long drive in the back of a cab might be enough to worry about, but I had a real worry that she would actually be born in that cab.  My mother’s first labor had been under an hour and all of her subsequent labors had been similarly speedy.  This, much more than the pain of it, sprang into my mind one afternoon toward the end of Mira’s inside time.

While I was mired in this worry, steeped in a bit of my own darkness, I happened to look out the window.  A rainbow hovered just above the buildings.  Never have I seen a rainbow either before or since then in New York.  This picture is of that moment.  It is certainly not the most technically beautiful cityscape, but it is my dearest.

Corner View: Coffee Granitas

20 May 2009 Filed In: all the rest, coffee, corner view, Dairy-free, Desserts, Drinks, Fall, frozen desserts, Gluten-free, Soy-free, Spring, Summer, Vegan, Vegetarian, Winter


If you ask me to talk about coffee, or “cwafee,” as we’re prone to say up yonder, a certain longing will creep in.  The taste is devine, the smell even better, but coffee does strange things to me.  I remember lying on the floor in my best friend’s room in high school after drinking it, popping Tums like some sort of mild addict, and happily awaiting the next fix.  

In college and after, I quickly figured out that espresso was the thing.  Somehow it doesn’t demand the bottles of chalk that coffee does.  
New Yorkers generally drink Dunkin Donuts coffee, Starbucks,  coffee from the Mud truck or one of the many fantastic cafes.  La Colombe comes to mind as our neighborhood favorite.  
Although it has been shockingly chilly here in New York for days, we made an icy espresso drink that will keep us strong through the warm months.  Aside from the actual brewing of the espresso, your kids can easily make this granita with you.  We let our children have a little bit of it- topped with a heaping cloud of cream of course.  
Coffee Granita
2 mini-servings, 1 big serving

*1/4 c. brewed espresso 
*1/2-3/4 c. water (use filtered if your city water tastes funky)
*1 T. agave or 2 T. simple syrup***
*fresh whipped cream for serving

Stir the espresso, water, and sweetener together in a bowl, ideally with a pour spout at the side.  Let your Yummy get everything well incorporated.

Together, pour the mixture into an ice cube tray and freeze at least 8 hours, or overnight.  

Into an unplugged food processor, throw in all of the ice cubes.  Place the top on securely, and then plug the processor in.  Show your mini-chef how to press the “pulse” button for one second.  This is a very special job, and they will now get to do it 14 more times.  Count together so that, with the demo pulse, you pulse a total of 15 times for one second.  

Unplug the processor.  Open the top and spoon the granita into glasses.  Top with the whip and serve.  


***To make simple syrup, combine equal parts sugar and water in a saucepan and bring to a boil, stirring a bit.  Cool and use for coffee, lemonade, etc.

You can get your fix elsewhere around the world:

Corner View: The Great Outdoors

13 May 2009 Filed In: all the rest, corner view





For this week’s corner view, we were supposed to give a little peek into the Great Outdoors around our ‘hood.  It pretty much poured all of last week, but there was a break on Saturday.  We hit the park for some playtime and sped around town on our scooters to the annual planting in Duane Park, the tiny little park on one of the most stunning blocks in New York City.

There, we got to meet and greet our local policeman, plant some basil that will hopefully be a part of some delicious pesto when it grows up, and pet this gorgeous python.  

Speaking of the Great Outdoors, Local Yummies should check out the Tribeca CSA.  I had no idea that it even existed until they sent me a sweet email.  You could still join for the year but would have to decide lickety split.  It runs June through October, and pick-up is in Washington Market Park.  
Now to do a little sightseeing.  Here are the other Corner Views from around the world:

Clean Oatmeal and Chocolate Chip Cookies

12 May 2009 Filed In: chocolate, cookies, cooking class, Dairy-free, Desserts, Fall, Soy-free, Spring, Summer, Vegetarian, Winter

 




A cookie recipe that I read about the other day on the  A Day that is Dessert Blog intrigued me.  Lecia had read about the recipe via another  blog, 3191 (got to love the internet) and made them successfully, and it struck me right away as a great recipe to try out for my Friday class.  It was their last class of the year, and they had been promised a treat.

Of course, I followed the original recipe by Terry Walters to the letter when trying it out at home.  This recipe is part of the perfectly lovely Clean Food Cookbook.  Now, perhaps I have a dirtier type of palate because my cookies tasted, well, a little too clean.  They quickly got fixed up for the mini-chefs by adjusting the flour and substituting a bit of cocoa powder in its stead.  Fellow chocolate advocates know that good dark chocolate is a health food, and like any other health food, must be taken medicinally in moderation (wink wink).  Later, after class and back in my own kitchen the addition of freshly ground peanut butter and almond butter greatly improved the texture and flavor.  
The addition of the cocoa was, naturally, a total success with the Yummies.  When I arrived at class, they were asking what we were making.  “Broccoli Cookies, ” I said, poker-faced.  This was met with stony or incredulous faces.  “Ha ha!  Just kidding!  We’re making chocolate chip cookies.”  Relief.  Laughter.  Glee.  Running to the work table to sit down immediately.  You see, sometimes a cookie should be just a cookie, spruced up a bit.
Clean Oatmeal and Chocolate Chip Cookies
adapted from Clean Food Cookbook, Terry Walters

*2 c. rolled oats (not the quick-cooking kind)
*3/4 c. whole wheat pastry flour
*1/4-1/2 c. unsweetened cocoa powder
*1 c. unsweetened shredded coconut
*2 t. cinnamon
*1/2 t. salt
*1/4 c. peanut or almond butter
*1/2 c. canola oil
*3/4 c. maple syrup
*2 t. vanilla
*1 c. walnuts, toasted***
*1 c. mini chocolate chips or Sun Chips (m & m’s) or both

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F.  Line two baking sheets with parchment.

In one bowl, whisk together the oats, flour, cocoa powder, coconut, cinnamon and salt.  In another bowl, whisk together the nut butter, canola, maple syrup and vanilla.  

Now, have your Yummy pour all of the wet things into the dry things and stir them together with a wooden spoon, rubber spatula, or-even better- their hands till everything is completely combined.

Sprinkle in the chips and walnuts.  Mix them in to the batter nicely.

Using your hands or a mini ice-cream scoop, form balls or little logs and place them on the prepared baking sheets.  

Big Person: Bake your cookies for about 15-20 minutes, according to the size of the cookies you’ve sculpted.  Cool on a rack for a few minutes.  Devour.

*** Spread the walnuts out on a rimmed baking sheet.  Toast in the oven for about a half an hour at 300 F or until they smell nice and toasty.  


Mama’s Meatballs and Hope For Kai

07 May 2009 Filed In: cooking class, Fall, lunchbox, Main Dish, meatballs, Spring, Summer, Winter






One of the things about cooking that I have most loved from childhood is getting to cook for others.  It’s part of the artistry-the making, the packaging (at least sometimes), and the love that pours into the entire process.  We’re all big dessert fans around here, for instance, but we’re never happier when we can make dessert and share it with our friends and family.  This practice of cooking with generosity has been something that we try to infuse into our classes, and even when the Yummies are struggling with sharing -or turn-taking as Mama Sonia would remind me is more appropriate at this age- our class is clearly built solely around the practice of making a dish together and eating it together.  

This week we had the honor of cooking for a family who is undergoing the unimaginable.  Kai, a  four-year-old, was diagnosed a few weeks ago with a form of leukemia that is incurable unless he finds a bone marrow donor.  His little brother, tragically, is not a match, and our entire community has swung into action to help find a match for Kai.  If that wasn’t enough for one family, Kai’s daddy had been diagnosed in 2008 with incurable lymphoma.  See.  The Unimaginable.
After getting swabbed and praying that we were matches for Kai, the Yummy Mummies wanted to do something more for his family.  And so, we cooked.  The mini-chefs, while still so young, were able to contribute their effort and love to help Kai and his family in this small way.
To find out more about Kai and his story, click here.  

Mama’s Meatballs

*2 eggs, room temperature and slightly beaten
*1 small zucchini or summer squash
*1 medium carrot
*1 small-medium red, Vidalia, or other sweet onion
*4 mini-chef handfuls of breadcrumbs or oat flour**
*1/4-1/2 c. parmesan cheese, grated
*2 heaping T. flat leaf parsley, finely chopped
*1 lb. ground pork
*1 lb. ground beef
*salt and pepper to taste
*a bit of canola or grapeseed oil to grease the baking sheet.

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F.  With your mini-chef, line two rimmed baking sheets with aluminum foil or parchment and grease them with a little oil, reminding your mini-chef to get oil onto the entire rectangle of  silver foil.

Next, wash the veggies together with a veggie brush.  It’s helpful to sing and dance while you’re washing-we think that vegetables enjoy a bit of show while they have their bath.  Notice that you must scrub pretty hard to wash the carrots, but your touch with the zucchini should be lighter, so that the skin stays in tact.

Big Person: Now cut the carrots and zucchini into chunks that will either fit through your food processor (if you have one) or that will be a bit easier to grate.  Peel the skin off of the onion, chop off the woody top and quarter the onion.  Grate everything together into one large bowl (If you have a food processor, grate all the veggies with your grater attachment).

Back Together Again: Now add the eggs, breadcrumbs or oat flour, parmesan, and parsley to the bowl with the veggies and stir well.  

Add the meats.  The easiest thing to do at this point is to use your hands to mix the meats into the other ingredients.  If your mini-chef is very young, though, and still tends to put things in his or her mouth-like say, oh, raw meat- then you can use a large wooden spoon instead.  

Once the ingredients are mixed together well, it’s time to shape the meatballs.  There are two ways of doing this, each fun in its own way.  The first way is the traditional: scoop up a little of the meatball mixture, roll it gently between your hands to form a ball, and place each ball on the prepared baking sheets.  The other way, which would be the preferred way for any Yummy who is doing the afore-mentioned putting anything and everything in his or mouth.  Use a very small ice cream scoop to scoop up some mixture and drop the balls right onto the baking sheets.  Big Person will most likely have to help with the dropping process, but this way does go quickly.

Big Person: Place the meatballs into the oven and bake for 30-40 minutes or until nicely browned and cooked all the way through.


***To make oat flour, place raw rolled oats (not quick cooking) into the bowl of a food processor and blitz until powdery.