Monday, August 02, 2021

Chocolate Brown Rice Roasted Almond Mylk





Slightly angled top view, close up of chocolate brown rice almond mylk with ice

“Good lord! This tastes freaking delicious!!!” I said, as I slurped the smooth, light liquid delightedly. ๐Ÿฅ›๐Ÿคค


It was the first time I tasted rice mylk. I’d purchased it at a grocery store in the US. 


Initially I’d been skeptical to pick it up because the tetra packed almond mylk from the same brand had been an overwhelming disappointment.


But my curiosity won, and here I was, sipping on this incredibly soothing, vanilla flavoured beverage.


After that, I glugged down tumblers and tumblers of rice mylk on a daily basis while I could get my hands on it.


As soon as I got back to Bangalore, I wanted to try making it at home.


I did some research, cooked white rice, and blended it with water.


❗️What emerged was a thick, starchy, undrinkable mess! ๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿคฃ


It was nothing like the heavenly tetra packed goodness I’d fallen in love with. But I don’t give up easily. Certainly not after the first try.


It took a couple more experiments, but eventually I zeroed in on the perfect home made rice mylk recipe. ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿฝ




๐Ÿš Use a variety of rice that doesn’t have all its fibre polished off – brown or red (Rajmudi) work great

๐Ÿ’ฆ Contrary to what you’d expect, the volume of water has to be higher in rice mylk than in nut mylks (like 1/2 C cooked rice to approximately 1 L water)


That’s it. That’s the big secret. ๐Ÿ˜‚


Blend well. Strain. Get ready to *glug glug slurp*.


Some bonus tips:


๐Ÿ“ Cook the rice very well, and cool it completely before blending.

๐Ÿ“ You can add any sweetener (dates, jaggery, maple syrup) and flavour (pure vanilla extract, cocoa powder, cinnamon) while blending and then strain the mylk.

๐Ÿ“ If you have a high powered blender, you might not have much stuff left to strain. But strain it anyway. This mylk is best enjoyed smooth and light!


If you enjoy these hacks that go beyond just recipes, join one of my Demystifying Vegan Cooking small group training sessions.


Rice mylk is very enjoyable when you drink it by itself (lightly sweetened if you like). But it also works well in:


๐ŸŒผ Cereal

๐ŸŒผ Payasam/Pudding

๐ŸŒผ Smoothie

๐ŸŒผ Fermented into Spicy Buttermylk

๐ŸŒผ In baking Cookies, Cakes and Bread

๐ŸŒผ Light, cold beverages




Chocolate Brown Rice Roasted Almond Mylk

2 T Well Cooked Brown Rice

3-4 Roasted Almonds

3 tsp Cocoa Powder

Date Syrup to taste (alternatives: Jaggery, Maple Syrup)

Dash of Pure Vanilla Extract (skip if you don’t have pure extract)

Pinch of Salt

2 Cups of Water


  • Add all ingredients (except water) into a blender jar
  • Pour in a little water and blend into a creamy paste
  • Add the rest of the water and blend until smooth
  • You could optionally strain this
  • Pour over ice and enjoy your refreshing beverage! ☺️





Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Beet Avocado Wasabi Salad


Close up of Avocado Steamed Beetroot Wasabi Salad in a stoneware bowl. Chapathi and Cutlets blurred in the background in the same bowl.

 ๐Ÿฅ‘ I wanted to make guacamole today to have with chapathi. But when I halved the avocado, it was so firm, I just didn’t have the heart to mash it!

So I peeled and cubed it, and stared at it lovingly, waiting for inspiration to flow.


The image of a fabulous salad rose up in my mind. It would be slightly on the sweet side, and carry a complex flavour profile that was worthy of this perfect avocado.


I didn’t know what flavours yet, but I knew without a doubt that steamed beetroot had to be in there! ๐Ÿ˜„


So I scrubbed, cubed and put the beets for steaming. They were organic, so I didn’t even need to peel them.


Then the dressing ingredients dropped into my head. Tak. Tak. Tak.


Balsamic Vinegar

Wasabi

Miso Paste


Oh my! ๐Ÿคค♥️


I carefully mixed them with the avocados. And as soon as the beets were nice and soft, I put them in and quickly tossed everything together one last time.


The avos held their shape well for the most part. Some of the edges got mashed, but that worked out well, adding a creamy coating to the beets.


I tasted it.


๐Ÿ˜ฒ๐Ÿคค


It was everything I imagined it would be.


So of course I had to tell you all about it! ๐Ÿ˜„ Try it.


Here are the approximate ingredient quantities:

1 medium sized Avocado

2 small Beets

1 heaping tsp Miso Paste

1/2 tsp Wasabi

2 tsp Balsamic Vinegar


Notes:

๐Ÿ“ Instead of Miso, you can use some Soy Sauce if you like.

๐Ÿ“ And Balsamic Vinegar can be replaced with a combination of Apple Cider Vinegar and a bit of Jaggery/Date Syrup.

๐Ÿ“  But there’s absolutely nothing that can replace the nose watering goodness of Wasabi!

Friday, June 18, 2021

Vegan GiNNada KaDubu (Jun KuDumulu)


 

Close up of a sweet called GiNNa in Kannada. This is the vegan, cruelty-free version. Rectangular slice, brown in colour, jelly texture. In an off white bowl and a bit of steel spoon showing.

 ๐Ÿฎ GiNNa เฒ—ಿเฒฃ್เฒฃ is a dessert traditionally made out of Jaggery and Colostrum. Let me describe these exotic ingredients to you...

Freshly extracted sugarcane juice is boiled for a long time in large, heated vats. It gets caramelised into a delicious sweetener. That’s Jaggery. ๐Ÿคค

A female is pregnant for a long time. Soon after she gives birth, an antibody rich secretion comes out of her mammary glands to feed her baby. That’s Colostrum. ๐Ÿ˜ณ

Now imagine what kind of a sick, twisted mind decided to put the two together and invent dessert.

Someone sees a cow give birth and says, “hey, let me push that wee baby calf aside, squeeze the very first milk out of his mother’s udders, and cook it with Jaggery.”

And then it just becomes a special, gourmet recipe, passed on from generation to generation.

It’s bloody scary how easy it is for us humans to commodify and normalise the use of things which we have absolutely no business taking! ๐Ÿคฏ๐Ÿ˜จ

Sadly, as a kid, GiNNa was one of my favourite desserts.

Usually I’m not the kind of vegan who feels guilty about my past food choices. What’s done is done. I’m just grateful I make better choices now.

But GiNNa is the one dessert from my past that breaks my heart. ๐Ÿ’”๐Ÿ˜ข

I can’t believe how casually my tastebuds could enjoy something that an innocent new born should’ve been eating. ๐Ÿฎ๐Ÿ„๐Ÿ‘ฉ๐Ÿฝ‍๐Ÿผ

If you still like GiNNa, you don’t have to wait for a cow to give birth and steal her baby’s first food.

Instead, make this Vegan GiNNa anytime you crave it!

Close up of a caramel brown, jelly like dessert being help up with a steel spoon. More dessert in the background. A vegan version of GiNNa (in Kannada), also known as Junnu (in Telegu).
 

1 1/2 L Soy Mylk
15 g Agar Agar Sheet – cut into small strips
1 1/2 C Jaggery

๐ŸŒปRinse the agar agar strips
๐ŸŒนAdd to soy mylk and bring to boil
๐ŸŒปReduce heat to low and keep cooking, stirring periodically, until the agar dissolves completely (takes 20-30 mins)
๐ŸŒนGently stir in the Jaggery and simmer on low heat for a couple of minutes until it dissolves (don’t let the mylk boil!)
๐ŸŒปTurn off heat and transfer to a tray or individual cups
๐ŸŒนAllow to cool, then let it sit in the fridge for at least 2 hours
๐ŸŒปEnjoy cold!

๐Ÿ“ Other plant based mylks work, but fresh, homemade soy mylk gives the best texture
๐Ÿ“ You can use agar agar powder instead of sheets