Category Archives: vegetable recipes

Beets: try them, you’ll like them!

Beets — four+ ways to use them.

Having been raised in a somewhat ethnic family (the ā€œold country,ā€ in this case, being Russia/Poland), I tend to be more open to trying– and usually liking–foods that most Americans would not even consider touching. Heart, liver, kidneys, trotters, blood puddings: my relatives had a real ā€œwaste no part of the animal mentality.ā€ Nose to tail consumption. As Iā€™ve always been slender and healthy, I figure I must be doing something right. Iā€™ve also never met a vegetable I didnā€™t like. Iā€™ll never starve to death, that’s for sure!

beets for kvass

All you need are beets, salt and clean H2O to make Kvas.

One vegetable that I enjoy, yet a lot of people will turn their noses up to, is the humble beet. Beets are typically a deep, rich ruby red in color, although you can also find orange and two-tone ones (alternating layers of red and white). Vegetables that have deep colors tend to be supersaturated with nutrients, antioxidants, minerals and vitamins.

I grow beets in the garden and have come to love the beet greens (tops) as well. Some people say that beets taste like dirt (maybe thatā€™s why I like them, lol), but the tops, when sautĆ©ed, taste similar to spinach. Harvesting just a few leaves at a time from several plants throughout the summer and early fall will cause replacement leaves grow, thereby creating a sustainable situation. The leaves can also be added to salads, raw and chopped, therefore retaining their nutritional value.

beet kvas

Kvas: day 1 and ready to ferment.

Some of my favorite ways to use the beet roots is pickling (these can also be canned), roasted and cut into pieces for salads, grated raw into salads, fermented pickling, beet kvas and a cold or hot soup called borscht. Beets also have a natural earthy sweetness to them that pairs beautifully with salty/sour pickling and fermentation.

Pickled Beets
This makes a great cold side dish, especially with summer barbecues or added to a chopped salad. Food Network has a nice Alton Brown pickled beet recipe that calls for roasting the beets first, and then letting them soak in a seasoned brine mixture for up to 7 days before serving. Iā€™ve tried this one and itā€™s a winner!

beet kvas

Ten days later…

Old Fashioned Fermented Pickled Beets
Iā€™ve tried the recipe in Nourishing Traditions, which calls for whey and itā€™s just ā€œokay.ā€ I prefer not using whey for fermentation, the results just donā€™t taste the same as natural fermentation. Hereā€™s a good fermented beets recipe that calls for simply beets, salt and water. Personally, I would also add onions. And fermentation = probiotics!

Borscht
Iā€™ve never actually made this soup, but I have had it a few times in both Russian and Jewish restaurants. In those instances the cold soup was purĆ©ed, served with a dollop of sour cream, and I couldnā€™t identify what was in it other than beets. Served in this way, the soup makes a nice appetizer (as opposed to a meal, which calls for a heartier recipe).

My search on the internet brought up a variety of recipes that include all sorts of ingredients, some with meat, some without. This Borscht recipe from Cooks.com has the best rating and comments from cooks. I am tempted to take the advice in one comment about using tomato paste, fried in butter, rather than canned tomatoes. Note: Try not to use canned anything, unless you have no other option! Fresh is best!

beet kvas

After 10+ days the Kvas is ready to drink. Yum!

Beet Kvas
This is a fermented, naturally carbonated beverage made from only three ingredients: beets, filtered water and salt. The first time I made and tasted this I just knew it was a tonic for the blood. Thereā€™s something about the combination of salty-sour-carbonation that I crave at times. And Kvas practically makes itself.

Update: A week in the fridge and the little kvas I have left has turned a brownish red. But it still smells and tastes good, so keep that in mind.

Beet Kvas - no whey!

A carbonated salty-sour-yet-sweet beverage that can be considered a tonic, or cleansing... or just plain delicious! This will ferment just fine without the whey called for in other recipes.
Prep Time20 minutes
Total Time21 minutes
Servings: 1 quarts (roughly)

Ingredients

  • 3-4 beets a generous medium size
  • 1-1/2 quarts water filtered
  • 1 TB sea salt (or a little more if you like)
  • 1-2 cloves garlic Optional

Instructions

  • Wash beet roots to remove any dirt but don't overdo it, you don't want to remove all the good (lactobacillus) bacteria.
  • Chop into, roughly, 1" chunks.
  • Add beets to a half gallon jar.
  • Add 1 TB sea salt.
  • Add filtered water to within 1/2" below lip.
  • Cover with lid and write the date on the jar with a Sharpie.
  • Allow to ferment, out of direct sunlight, for 1-1/2 weeks or more.
  • When done, this can be strained, or just serve right out of the jar, chunks and all. Enjoy!

Notes

Don't drink this if it smells or looks bad or has mold growing in or on it. Natural fermentation can sometimes go wrong, so be smart! My beets sometimes turn almost black, but there is nothing wrong with them and the kvas smells sweet and earthy. Delicious!
The Kvas could become syrupy towards the bottom of the jar. Just mix it back in before consuming.

A Glorious Feast: Garden Harvest Lasagna

My teenage son became a vegetarian this winter, so I’ve been cooking more meatless dishes whenever possible, or altering my meat-containing recipes (such as soups and stews) so that I can add protein separately. For years I’ve seen recipes for zucchini lasagna and it never sounded very exciting to me, but I love vegetables and want to find new ways to use them in meals other than the usual sautĆ©ed or steamed side dishes.

Ricotta ingredients

Now, in early summer when our vegetables start maturing, I usually end up with one of this, one of that, an undersized otherā€”not enough for a complete meal’s side dish.

A recipe for homemade ricotta cheese I found through Pinterest promised to make the best tasting ricotta in about 15 minutes. That caught my attentionā€”and imagination. Thinking back on one of my favorite vegetable pasta dishes, Pasta Primavera, I came up with my own vegetable lasagna dish that totally knocked my socks off! Not only was it one of the best lasagnas I’ve ever had, but it was easy!

I already had most of the vegetables I needed. After a quick trip to Whole Foods I also had ricotta ingredients, pasta sauce, mozzarella.

Try it, you’ll like it!

I found a new 365 pasta sauce I’d not seen beforeā€”Sun Dried Tomato & Basil. That turned out to be a very fortuitous choice!Ā I have to say I LOVE this sauce. It’s so good that it tastes great cold, right out of the jar. I think it would be a fantastic dip for pizza-dough breadsticks or as a quick and easy bruschetta. It has incredible flavor, thick sauce and lots of chunks of tomato. Belissimo!

I made a double recipe of ricotta and yes, it was so quick and easy that I don’t know why I haven’t tried that before. It’s extremely fresh tasting, sweet and delicious!

I julienned the vegetables, sautĆ©ed them in olive oil until they were only slightly softened and then set up my assembly line on the kitchen island: sauce, raw zucchini “noodles”, ricotta mix, shredded mozzarella. I used an 8×8 Pyrex baking dish. I layered my ingredients, baked at 350Ā° for about 45 minutes and voila, pulled the bubbling beauty from the oven.

Yum!

The vegetables were perfectly al dente, the ricotta sweet and rich, the sauce an enticing combination of flavor and texture. My guest even spontaneously commented on how delicious and satisfying this meal turned out to be. It was SO good that I had cold leftovers for breakfast the following two mornings.

And as for my son? I had actually made this dish for him. But between his night job at Noodles & Company and spare time spent with his girlfriend, he didn’t have a chance to even try it. One of life’s little ironies!

Garden Harvest Vegetable Lasagna

I made an 8x8 Pyrex baking dish full from the recipe below and cut it into 6 good-sized pieces. I love to serve this with a nice salad and some bread, whether traditional or keto.
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Italian
Servings: 6 servings

Ingredients

Vegetable Prep

  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 2-3 cups sliced or julienned vegetables of your choice Onions, mushrooms, squash, carrots, peppers, etc.

Ricotta Prep

  • 2 cups ricotta
  • 1 raw egg
  • 1 tsp Dried oregano and parsley
  • salt, pepper, garlic to taste

The rest

  • 2 zucchini (noodle substitute) sliced lengthwise, 1/4" or less thick
  • 2 cups pasta sauce of your choosing 365 Brand Sun Dried Tomato & Basil is highly recommended
  • 2-3 cups shredded mozzarella cheese
  • Red wine Not for the recipe, but for you. Well, ok, you can add some to the sauce if you want. šŸ™‚

Instructions

  • SautĆ© your vegetables of choice in the olive oil. When limp, add the pasta sauce.
  • Mix together ricotta, egg and seasonings.
  • Add some sauce to the bottom of your baking dish. Put down a layer of zucchini, a layer of the ricotta mix, sauce and then mozzarella. Repeat until you run out of ingredients.
  • Bake at 350Ā° until the lasagna is bubbling and the top layer of mozzarella is browned, about 45 minutes.

More of “Eat Your Veggies!”

I really love a hearty soup. Living in Colorado, our winters can begin in early October and last pretty much into May. I’ve come up with a lot of soup recipes over the years. I think of soups as perfect food: you can have you veggies, protein and carbs all mixed together in one warm, thick, hearty, delicious and satisfying meal. Soups can be very forgiving: you don’t have to follow soup recipes like a scientific equation. If you like the ingredient, it will play nice in the pot. As a mother, I’ve also found that you can pack extra nutrition into soups and fussy eaters won’t even know it’s there. Nutrition espionage at its finest.

Not stone soup!

I remember being in Kindergarten and Mrs. Rogers, our teacher, told us a story about stone soup. Her version was (and I’m not quoting her accurately here) there was a homeless man camping in the woods. He had no food and no one in the village was charitable enough to give him any. Some children came upon him in the woods. He had a campfire going and a pot of water boiling over the flames. Nowadays this story would never be told — who in their right mind would want their kids visiting with a hobo in the woods? Anyway, the kids asked him what he was making. He said “stone soup” ā€”and he tossed a stone into the boiling water. He said the soup was normally extremely delicious, but this one was missing something. A few carrots maybe. One of the kids ran home and brought him carrots. He tasted the water and said, “I bet an onion would make this taste great.” So another kid brought him an onion. He tasted the soup and said, “something’s missing, I think some celery would make this taste even better…” and so on until the kids had brought him many ingredients and he finally had this masterful soup. Well, I just thought he was the cleverest hobo that ever lived! And the story has stuck in my mind to this day. My Kitchen Sink Soup always reminds me of this story.

I wasn’t planning to make soup this week. It has been sunny, glorious and at least 70Ā°Ā every day. Not exactly soup weather. But I had a few odd bits of vegetables left in the fridge from my excursion to Heavenly Harvest Produce a couple of weeks ago. I also had some leftover cooked veggies. None of them added up to a full serving. Tie breaker: I bought some pork neck bones for my dog as an experiment. She is on a raw meat, species-appropriate diet, and I’m always looking for something new and economical for her to eat. I hadn’t added too many different bones to her diet, preferring to stick with the ever-safe natural chicken backs from WholeFoods and an occasional pork rib. The neck bones looked meaty and the bones didn’t look too thick and hard. After opening the package I found only one I was willing to give to my dog, so I thought the rest would make a nice broth. That’s when I decided that soup was definitely going on the menu.

Yes, they are in my sink.

Like my Kitchen Sink Salad, the name comes from my tossing an odd assortment of vegetables in the sink for rinsing. I also consider the soup consisting of “everything but the kitchen sink.” Gotta keep an open mind. I start out with my typical basic soup base: a chopped onion, 2-3 ribs of chopped celery, a few cloves of chopped garlic and 2-3 chopped carrots. Sometimes I sautĆ© them in super-healthy coconut oil, but this time I opted for extra virgin olive oil. I sautĆ© these in a dutch oven until the onion starts to approach translucency. Ā At this point I added the pork neck bones, browned them just a little bit, and then added 8 cups of chicken broth. Since the pork was raw going in and I wasn’t going anywhere, I turned the heat way down and let it simmer for an hour plus. I added some salt and pepper at some point. When it looked “right,” I turned off the heat, moved the pork bones to a plate and left the pot on the stovetop to cool down. Once the bones cooled off, I stripped the meat off, put it in a separate bowl and placed it, covered, in the fridge. My son is a vegetarian and so to make life easier, I make one big pot of soup (he doesn’t mind broths, he just won’t eat meat) and keep the actual meat bits separate for my own dining pleasure.

When I had gathered all the other ingredients I wanted to put in my soup, I turned the burner back on, starting chopping veggies and adding them to the broth as I went along. Once the pot was full, I let them simmer for about 30 minutes. I had some teensy alphabet pasta in the pantry and threw it into the broth to soften. When we were ready to have dinner, I put some of the meat bits into bowls and we served ourselves the hot soup. We grated some parmesan cheese on top and toasted and buttered some artisan bread for dunking. My absolute favorite is the rosemary bread sold at WholeFoods — not only is it delicious, but when you toast it the fragrance of rosemary fills the kitchen. It also makes heavenly croutons. My African Greys and our pet rat also gotā€”and lovedā€”some soup for dinner. What was left was given to the chickens who quickly cleaned their plate. There’s nothing so universal as good, healthy food.

This soup freezes really well too!

YOUR Kitchen Sink Soup

You are in charge, add whatever ingredients you like, or things in the fridge that you need to use up! Serving number and prep time are also up to you.
Course: Soup
Cuisine: American
Keyword: "everything" soup, soup recipe, vegetable soup

Ingredients

  • 2-3 TB Olive oil

Soup base

  • 2-3 carrots chopped
  • 2-3 stalks of celery chopped
  • 1 cup onion chopped
  • garlic to taste
  • 4-8 cups stock (poultry, meat or veggie); Better Than Bouillon will do if you don't have stock. Amount depends on how much you want to make

Soup Ingredients

  • Whatever you like or need to use up! Raw or cooked vegetables, meats; herbs such as oregano, thyme, parsley, bay; rice, pasta, beans or barley.
  • Season to taste. Since you may be using cooked veggies, keep in mind they already have been seasoned
  • A little grated parmesan on top is great!

Instructions

  • SautĆ© the soup base vegetables in the olive oil; once they soften a bit (10 mins?), add the stock.
  • Add the other ingredients of your choice and cook for 20-30 minutes. Cooked rice or pasta should go in last so they don't get mushy.