Thursday, February 19, 2009

Stuffed Veggie Buns


Stuffed palya buns are a very common snack in most small bakeries here in Karnataka. A yummy, savory potato mixtures is stuffed into the bun dough before popping them into the oven. Ahh the memories of biting into hot, freshly baked buns and the taste of the potato rolling on to the tongue...

Ever since I've become more confident about baking breads I've started to experiment (as usual) and stuffed buns have a great scope for variations.

Yesterday I decided to stuff the whole wheat buns with a vegetable mixture and they turned out better than I'd expected. And everyone who tasted it (tuition kid, neighbor, hubby...) thought they were delish.

So here's the recipe - and feel free to share here if you come up with your own stuffing variations (vegan only please).



Stuffed Veggie Buns

For the buns:

2 C Whole Wheat Flour
1/2 T Active Dry Yeast
1/4 C Olive Oil
1 1/2 tsp Salt
5 T sugar

Put the wheat flour in a large bowl. Make a hole in the center and put in 1/2 tsp of the sugar and the yeast. Pour 1/2 C lukewarm water over the hole. Let it sit for 10-15 mins till the yeast froths and bubbles. Pour in the rest of the ingredients and mix together into a dough using as much water as required. Knead the dough well till it obtains a soft and elastic texture. Make it into a ball and cover with a clean, wet cloth. Keep it aside for about an hour and let it rise.

Meanwhile....

For the filling:

1/2 C chopped carrots
1/2 C chopped green beans
1 medium capsicum (green bell pepper) chopped
2 Small white onions sliced
1/2 t Mustard Seeds
1/4 t Turmeric powder
1 T any cooking oil
Salt (to taste)

Cook the carrots, beans and capsicum in the microwave for 5-8 minutes.

Heat the oil in a pan. Quickly add the mustard seeds and step away. They will immediately crackle. Add the turmeric powder. Add the onions and stir. Fry them till they are slightly brown. Add the cooked vegetables. Stir and cook for a couple of minutes. Add salt, mix and turn off the flame.

How to proceed:

Once the dough has been sitting for an hour, punch it down and form into a log. Pull off bits and roll them into balls (about 2-3 inch rounds). Cup one of the rounds in one palm and press the top in to make a deep dent and working from the inside-outwards shape the dough into a bowl. Place some veggie mixture in and cover the hole by pulling the dough in from all sides and folding over. Now with the folded side down, shape it into a bun. Do the same with the remaining dough rounds and place them on a baking sheet covered with parchment paper.

Pre heat the oven to 230C / 450F and bake for 20-30 minutes till the tops have browned well.


Vegan White Chocolate Orange Almond Truffles




So this is where too much Vegan Blog hopping gets me!

Last morning, I came across these super yum looking White Chocolate Walnut Truffles on the VegSpinz blog and I was immediately overcome by the desire to stuff my face with them!

So I decided to create a variation of my own...

White Chocolate Orange Almond Truffles


All ingredients are in approximate values since I just throw stuff in without measuring. Feel free to modify the amounts to your liking.


1 C Vegan White Chocolate Chips
1/2 C Cashews
1/4 C Soymilk (use as required)
1/4 t Orange Essential Oil
1/4 C Almonds
1 C Vegan Dark Chocolate Chips

For the truffle mixture:

-Grind the cashews into a fine powder, add a dash of the soymilk and blend, add a little bit more soymilk if required and process into a very creamy paste.
-Melt the white chocolate chips (in a double boiler or in the microwave).
-Toast the almonds and crush them lightly into tiny pieces. If you have the patience you can chop them :oP
-Mix the cashew cream and orange essential oil with the white chocolate.
-Add in the almonds and mix well.
-Pop in the freezer for around 20 minutes or so, until it has hardened slightly.

How to proceed:

-Melt the dark chocolate chips.
-Make little balls of the truffle mixture and dip them in the melted chocolate.
-Drop them on parchment paper.
-Pop in the freezer to set again.


Note: I have used truffle molds for these. These can be used by coating the walls and bottom of the mold with the melted dark chocolate. Putting a bit of the truffle mixture in and covering the top with a layer of melted dark chocolate.

Enjoy! :)

Monday, February 02, 2009

Herb Chutney Capsicum Rice


Sitting on my derrière twittering and playing scramble on facebook is a sure fire way to ensure that dinner hasn't even begun to be cooked by dinner time. Past 9 pm, husband hasn't been fed and the poor darling hasn't said a peep about it, it's time to dream up a meal which gets cooked up as well as tucked away in a snap.

Lately I've let out the goddess of concocting from within more often than not. And what I've realized is that the most scrumptious meals are the ones prepared in a jiffy huff huff.

I apologize in advance for the less than agreeable photography. But when I'm really hungry, I cannot offer more than a camera phone click and post. It doesn't help that the lighting theme in the house leans towards cozy/romantic rather than "spotlight! watch me while I eat!"

Basically what I'm trying to say is that the rice is not a jarring florescent like that picture portrays it to be. It's actually a rather pleasant shade of green. And the red and yellow bell peppers make the dish quite attractive.



Herb Chutney Capsicum (Bell Pepper) Rice

For the rice:
3/4 C Rice
1/2 Yellow Capsicum sliced into strips
1/2 Red Capsicum sliced into strips
1 Small While Onion cut into rings
3 t Olive Oil

Seasonings (quantity of each according to preference):
Turmeric
Cinnamon
Pepper
Salt

For the chutney:
1/2 C Cilantro
1/4 C Spearmint Leaves
1 Green Chilli
Handful Cashews

Cook the rice in the microwave with 3 cups of water for 20 minutes.

Toss the white onion and the red and yellow capsicums with the olive oil and cook in the microwave (using the grill+micro mode if available) for 3-5 minutes till they are just done.

Mix the rice, veggies and seasoning ingredients together.

Taste. Hmm not bad but something's missing... Chutney!

Grind the cilantro, spearmint, cashew and green cilli into a paste using a wee bit of water.

Pour over rice and mix. Done!

Re-heat in microwave for half a minute and serve hubby. Say "attractive to look at and yummy to eat". He'll nod happily at start chowing down :)

Return to twitter and facebook.

The End.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Got the sniffles? Herbal Tea to the rescue!


Mom has always brought us up on home remedies for most common illnesses like colds, coughs, tummy problems etc... Whenever I feel something coming on I always turn to homemade remedies first. And only if, if, it gets really bad and unmanageable will I resort to pills and doctors. They have always worked beautifully (maybe a tad slowly compared to pills but safely and thoroughly nonetheless) and while people around me pump themselves with system screwing antibiotics, I sip on herbal teas and chew on homemade concoctions.

I had an inkling of a doubt last night before bed when after sitting under the fan for a couple of hours my nose started to feel a wee bit stuffy. But I just brushed the thought aside rationalizing that since I had a cold and fever just last month, I was done with my quota of colds for at least 5-6 more months. Now to make a home remedy work at its optimum, it's best to gulp it down at the very onset of any nasties. This morning, as soon as I woke up, I could feel a cold coming on for sure. Alas had I brewed a nice cup of the herbal spiced tea before bed it wouldn't even have come to this. Well anyways the sooner the tea is put into the system the better so first thing this morning I brewed myself a delicious cup of herbal spice tea and sipped on it while it was piping hot. I still do have my hankey next to me but I'm not using it as much as I would have if I'd further delayed the consumption of the spiced concoction.

So here's the magic recipe. Drink it in the morning on an empty stomach. And at night just before bed. A couple of days of this and the cold is evaporated right out of your system! :)


Herbal Tea - Home Remedy for Colds

1 inch Cinnamon Stick
1/2 inch Dry Ginger
1 Cardamom Pod
2 Cloves
4 Black Pepper Corns
1/2 t Coriander Seeds
1/2 t Fennel Seeds
1/4 t Tea
1/2 t Sugar (preferably rock sugar if you know what that is)
Pinch Sea Salt

Put 1 1/2 C of water for heating. Dump all the above ingredients in whole. Bring to boil. Reduce the heat and simmer on a medium-low flame for 15-20 minutes till the quantity of the water has reduced to about half (3/4 C). Strain. Drink hot!


Notes:
* It is preferable to use whole spices but if you can't find the whole ones you can use the powdered versions.
*All the above items will be easily available at an Indian Store.
*Buy a small pack of each and store them in a cool, dry place (not in cabinets above the stove). You could put them in airtight containers and pop them in the fridge if you like.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Art by Susmitha loves Etsy Hacks


etsyhacks

A fantastic site I discovered when schoollocker mentioned it on twitter. If you're a seller on etsy and use the firefox browser, you can install the Greasemonkey Add-on and then you're set to start adding the nifty scripts that Ian of etsyhacks has created.

This site is a treasure trove of awesome tools which will improve your etsy experience to a great extent! There are tools for the shop, the forums and the treasuries. And Ian very generously makes all these available for free. For those who love the tools, there's a donate button if you'd like to show your appreciation.

When I first looked at this site I was (cliché alert) like a kid in a candy store. I installed a whole lot of scripts and it barely took any time for each one to get added to my Greasemonkey. At first I thought I'd send in a donation but then I saw there was an option to be a sponsor for any of the scripts and also get some advertisement out of it. Pretty neat deal!

I e-mailed Ian and he turned out to be very friendly and communicative. He provided me with all the specifics I wanted to know about. When the script I was interested in sponsoring wasn't available, he made it a point to keep me posted on its progress. And then when he was about to release a new script which was bound to get popular, he gave me dibs on the sponsorship spot :)

So now I'm the proud sponsor (for 1 month to begin with) of the Copy Listing script :)

This is an awesome tool which has been requested for at the etsy forums time and again. When you are viewing a listing within your store, the Copy Listing script adds a link which when you click on it, creates a new listing with all the info (except the photos) from the previous listing. You know what that means? No more typing tags info over and over again! Yaaaah, like a dream come true, no? :D

So go check out Ian's awesomastic scripts and if you love them, then do consider donating a bit to the site to show your appreciation.